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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50515 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50515)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Sack of Monte Carlo, by Walter Frith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Sack of Monte Carlo
- An Adventure of To-day
-
-Author: Walter Frith
-
-Release Date: November 20, 2015 [EBook #50515]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SACK OF MONTE CARLO ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Cindy Beyer, Shaun Pinder and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE SACK OF MONTE CARLO
-
-
- =An Adventure of To-day=
-
- As narrated by Vincent Blacker, Esq.
- Lieutenant H.M.’s East ——shire Militia
-
- BY
- WALTER FRITH
- AUTHOR OF “IN SEARCH OF QUIET”
-
- _Quo timoris minus est, eo minus est Periculi_
- LIVY, xii., 5
-
- [Illustration]
-
- HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS
- NEW YORK AND LONDON
- 1898
-
-
-
-
- BY WALTER FRITH.
-
- * * * * *
-
- IN SEARCH OF QUIET. A Country Journal, May
- to July. Post 8vo, Cloth, $1.25.
-
- A very entertaining book, written in a very entertaining
- style.—_Cincinnati Commercial-Gazette._
- A book which will enchain the attention of the reader
- from beginning to end.—_Boston Advertiser._
- * * * * *
- NEW YORK AND LONDON:
- HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS.
-
- Copyright, 1897, by HARPER & BROTHERS.
- * * * * *
- _All rights reserved._
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- MRS. F. W. SHARON
-
- IN RECOLLECTION OF MANY HAPPY HOURS IN
-
- NEW YORK, ÉTRETAT, AND PARIS
-
- London, October, 1897
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- * * * * *
-
- CHAPTER I
- Some Slight Explanation—Objects of the
- Expedition—Love the Promoter—Lucy Thatcher—Her
- Portrait by Lamplight 1
-
- CHAPTER II
- “The French Horn”—Mabel Harker: My Unfortunate
- Engagement to Her—Mr. Crage and Wharton Park 7
-
- CHAPTER III
- I Continue to Keep Out of Mabel Harker’s Way and
- Go to Goring—Return to “The French
- Horn”—Wanderings with Lucy—Mr. Crage Rehearses
- His Own Funeral 17
-
- CHAPTER IV
- I am Free of Mabel Harker—Return to “The French
- Horn”—Disastrous Interference of Harold Forsyth
- in My Affairs 25
-
- CHAPTER V
- Anglesey Lodge—My Interview with Lucy in
- Kensington Gardens—Not so Satisfactory as I
- could Desire 29
-
- CHAPTER VI
- Early Difficulties—I Fail to Persuade the
- Honorable Edgar Fanshawe, the Reverend Percy
- Blyth, and Mr. Parker White, M.P., to Join our
- Monte Carlo Party 37
-
- CHAPTER VII
- I Interview Mr. Brentin—His Sympathy and
- Interest—Sir Anthony Hipkins and the Yacht
- _Amaranth_—We Determine to Look Over It 47
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- We Go to Ryde—The _Amaranth_—Accidental Meeting
- with Arthur Masters and His Lady Friend—I Enroll
- Him Among Us, Provisionally—We Decide to
- Purchase the Yacht 60
-
- CHAPTER IX
- My Sister’s Suspicions—Heroes of _The Argo_—My
- Sister Determines to Come with Us as Chaperon to
- Miss Rybot 70
-
- CHAPTER X
- Mr. Brentin’s Indiscretion—Lucy and I Make It
- Up—Bailey Thompson Appears in Church—On
- Christmas Day we Hold a Council of War 77
-
- CHAPTER XI
- Mr. Bailey Thompson Gives us His Ingenious
- Advice—We are Fools enough to Trust
- Him—Misplaced Confidence 87
-
- CHAPTER XII
- Monte Carlo—Mr. Van Ginkel’s Yacht _Saratoga_—We
- Prospect—Fortunate Discovery of the Point of
- Attack—First Visit to the Rooms 95
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- Mrs. Wingham and Teddy Parsons—He Foolishly
- Confides in Her—I Make a Similar Mistake 103
-
- CHAPTER XIV
- Arrival of the _Amaranth_—All Well on Board—Their
- First Experience of the Rooms 111
-
- CHAPTER XV
- Influence of Climate on Adventure—Unexpected
- Arrival of Lucy—Her Revelations—Danger Ahead 118
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- Council of War—Captain Evans’s Decision—I Go to
- the Rooms and Confide in My Sister 127
-
- CHAPTER XVII
- Enter Mr. Bailey Thompson—Van Ginkel Stands by
- Us—We Show Thompson Round and Explain
- Details—Teddy Parsons’s Alarm 136
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- Exit Mr. Bailey Thompson 146
-
- CHAPTER XIX
- The Great Night—Dinner at the “Hôtel de Paris”—A
- Last Look Round—The Sack and Its
- Incidents—Flight 151
-
- CHAPTER XX
- We Discover Teddy Parsons is Left Behind—I Make Up
- My Mind—To the Rescue!—Unmanly Conduct of the
- Others—I Go Alone—Disguise—The Garde Champêtre 171
-
- CHAPTER XXI
- In My Disguise I am Mistaken for Lord B.—A Club
- Acquaintance—Teddy at the Law Courts—Mrs.
- Wingham—The Defence and The Acquittal—We Bolt 185
-
- CHAPTER XXII
- Our Flight to Venice—Thence to Athens—We all Meet
- on the Acropolis—Reappearance of Mr. Bailey
- Thompson!—Again we Manage to Put Him Off the
- Scent 202
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
- We Arrive Safe in London and Go to Medworth
- Square—Back at “The French Horn”—News at Last of
- the _Amaranth_—I Interview Mr. Crage and Find
- Him Ill 219
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
- Arrival of Brentin—My Wedding-day—We Go to
- Wharton—Bailey Thompson and Cochefort Follow
- Us—We Finally Defeat Them Both 230
-
- CONCLUSION 243
-
-
-
-
- THE SACK OF MONTE CARLO
- “_I don’t say that it is possible; I only affirm it to be true._”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- SOME SLIGHT EXPLANATION—OBJECTS OF THE EXPEDITION—LOVE THE
- PROMOTER—LUCY THATCHER—HER PORTRAIT BY LAMPLIGHT
-
-
-THE idea occurred to me, quite unexpectedly and unsought for, early one
-morning in bed; and, as ideas of such magnitude are valuable and scarce
-(at any rate, with me), it was not long before I determined to try and
-realize it.
-
-The expedition was so successful, and we got, on the whole, so clear and
-clean away with the swag, or, as Mr. Julius C. Brentin, our esteemed
-American _collaborateur_, called it, “the boodle,” that, for my part,
-there I should have been perfectly content to let the affair rest; but,
-the fact is, so many of my friends have taken upon themselves to doubt
-whether we really did it at all, and the Monte Carlo authorities from
-the very first so cunningly managed to suppress all details (with their
-subsidized press), that I feel it due to us all to try and write the
-adventure out; since I know very well how, with most, seeing in print is
-believing.
-
-Briefly, then, my idea was to sack or raid the gambling-tables at Monte
-Carlo, that highly notorious _cloaca maxima_ for all the scum of Europe,
-which there gutters and gushes forth into the sapphire and tideless
-Mediterranean. I had worked details out for myself, and believed that,
-what with the money on the tables and the reserve in the vaults, there
-could not be much short of £200,000 on the Casino premises, a sum as
-much worth making a dash for, it seemed to me, as Spanish plate-ships to
-Drake or Raleigh. Nor did it seem likely we should have to do much
-fighting to secure it; for all the authorities I consulted assured me
-the place was by no means a Gibraltar, and, in fact, that half a dozen
-resolute gentlemen with revolvers and a swift steam-yacht waiting in the
-harbor would be more than enough to do the trick and clean the place
-out; which was pretty much what we found.
-
-As for the morality of the affair, I confess _that_ never in the least
-troubled me—never once. One puts morality on one side when dealing with
-a gaming-establishment, and to raid the place seemed to me just as
-reasonable and fair as to go there with a system, besides being likely
-to be a good deal more profitable. And since the objects to which we
-destined the money were in the main charitable, I soon came to regard
-the expedition strictly _in pios usus_ (as lawyers say), and hope and
-believe the public will regard it in that light too.
-
-Let me say right here—to quote Mr. Brentin again—that not one of us
-touched one single red cent of the large amount we so fortunately
-secured, but that it was all expended for the purposes (in the main, as
-I say, charitable) for which we had always intended it—with the single
-exception of a necklet of napoleons I had made for the fat little neck
-of my enchanting niece Mollie, which she always wears at parties, and
-keeps to this day in an old French plum-box, along with her beads and
-bangles and a small holy ring I once brought her from Rome; being
-amazingly fond of all sorts of bedizenments, as most female children
-are.
-
-Mollie, therefore, was the only person who really had any of the swag,
-or boodle; though, of course, she doesn’t know it, and thinks it was
-properly won at play. For as for Bob Hines, who had some for the new
-gymnasium and swimming-bath at his boys’ school at Folkestone; and Mr.
-Thatcher (my dear wife Lucy’s father), who got his old family estate,
-Wharton Park, back; and the hospitals, convalescent homes, and
-sanatoriums, which all shared alike; and Teddy Parsons, of my militia,
-who had the bill paid off that was worrying him—that was all in the
-original scheme, and all went to form the well-understood reasons for
-our undertaking the expedition; without which inducements, indeed, it
-would never even have started.
-
-So if, after this clear denial in print, the public still choose to
-fancy anything has stuck to my fingers, all I can ask them in fairness
-to do is to come to our flat in Victoria Street any morning between
-twelve and two, when they can see the accounts and receipts for
-themselves, all in order and properly audited by Messrs. Fitch & Black,
-the eminent accountants of Lothbury, E. C....
-
-Now, they say love is at the bottom of most of the affairs and
-enterprises of the world, and so I believe it mostly is. At all events,
-I don’t fancy I should have undertaken, or, at any rate, been so
-prominent in this Monte Carlo affair, if I hadn’t at the time been so
-deeply in love with Lucy, and correspondingly anxious to get her
-father’s property back for them at Wharton Park. It is situate near
-Nesshaven, on the Essex coast; which, though to many it may not be a
-particularly attractive part of the country, is to me forever sacred as
-the spot where I first met the dear girl who is now my wife, coming back
-so rosily from her morning bath, through the whin and the sand, from the
-long, flat shore and the idle sea, carrying her own damp towel back to
-her father’s inn, “The French Horn.”
-
-I can see her now as I saw her then, on that warm September morning
-eighteen months ago; sea and sky and monotonous Essex land all bathed in
-hazy sunshine, the whins still glistening with the morning mist, which
-at that time of the year lies heavily till the sun at mid-day warms them
-dry and sets the seed-cases exploding like Prince-Rupert drops—I can
-see her, I say, come towards me along the coast-guard path, round the
-pole that sticks up to mark it, and towards the wooden bridge that
-crosses one of the dikes.
-
-If any line of that sweet face were faint in my memory, I have only to
-look across at her now, as she sits sewing under the lamp as I write,
-for all its charm and perfection to be present as first I saw it. I have
-only to put a straw-hat on the pretty, rough, dark hair, which in
-sunshine gleams with the bronze of chestnut, give her a freckle or two
-on the low, white forehead, color her round cheek a little more
-delicately rose-leaf, and there she is—not forgetting to take away the
-wedding-ring!—as she passed me on the Nesshaven golf-links that hazy
-September morning eighteen months ago. There is the straight nose, the
-short upper lip, the pure, fresh mouth, the plump and rounded chin, and
-the soft, pink lips that part so readily with a smile and show the
-beautiful white teeth, white as the youngest hazel-nuts....
-
-Lucy felt my eyes were upon her, and looked up at me and smiled, with
-something of a blush, for she blushes very readily. She saw me still
-looking longingly, the invitation in my eyes, and after a moment’s
-hesitation (for, though we have been married nearly six months, she
-still is shy) she put down her sewing and came to me at my
-writing-table. She bent over me and put her arms round my neck, her warm
-cheek against mine. Her soft lips kissed me; I felt the tender, loving
-palpitation of her bosom as I bent my head back. Our sitting-room seemed
-full of silence, happy and melodious silence, while from outside in
-Victoria Street I head the jingle of a passing cab....
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- “THE FRENCH HORN”—MABEL HARKER, MY UNFORTUNATE ENGAGEMENT TO HER
- —MR. CRAGE AND WHARTON PARK
-
-
-THOUGH the idea to sack Monte Carlo did not occur to me till late in the
-year (in the September of which I first met Lucy Thatcher), I must first
-say something of my going down to Nesshaven in June, and the events
-which led to my being in a position to undertake an affair of such nerve
-and magnitude.
-
-Lucy thought I should take readers straight to Monte Carlo, confining
-myself to that part of the work only; but, after talking it over, she
-agrees with me now that the adventure must be led up to in the natural
-way it really was or the public won’t believe in it, after all, and I
-shall have all my pains for nothing. So that’s what I shall do, in the
-shortest and best way I can; promising, like the esteemed old
-circus-rider Ducrow, as soon as possible to “cut the cackle and come to
-the ’osses.”
-
-Well, then, it was towards the middle of June when I joined the golf
-club at Nesshaven, just after my militia training month was over. I was
-introduced by Harold Forsyth (one of our Monte Carlo band later, and one
-of the stanchest of them), who had the golf fever very badly, and, I
-must say, was beginning to make himself rather a bore with it.
-
-He and I went down from Liverpool Street and stayed at “The French
-Horn,” the inn kept by Mr. Thatcher, Lucy’s father; and after Forsyth
-had introduced me to the club and shown me round the links, he went back
-to his regiment, the “Devon Borderers,” then stationed at Colchester,
-very angry and complaining, as soldiers mostly are when obliged to do
-any work. I remained behind, not that I had yet seen Lucy, but rather to
-keep out of Mabel Harker’s way—the young lady to whom (as Lucy knows) I
-happened, much against my will, to be at that time unfortunately engaged
-to be married.
-
-My first visit to “The French Horn” lasted three weeks, during which
-time I manfully held my ground, though heavily bombarded by Mabel’s
-letters, regularly discharged thrice a week from her aunt’s house in
-Clifton Gardens at Folkestone. At last, as Mabel came to stay at her
-sister’s in the Regent’s Park (on purpose, I believe), I was obliged to
-go up to town for ten days, and there passed a sad time with her at the
-University match, Henley, and the Eton and Harrow; at which noted places
-of amusement and relaxation I cannot help thinking I was the most
-unhappy visitor, though, to be sure, I tried hard not to show it.
-
-But it was dreadful when I got back to my rooms in Little St. James’s
-Street and attempted sleep; for I really think that _not_ being in love
-with the person you have bound yourself to marry keeps more men awake
-_more miserably_ than any of the so-called torments of love, which, with
-scarcely an exception, I have never found otherwise than agreeable.
-
-At last Mabel went back to Folkestone, and I was free to return to “The
-French Horn,” and I never saw her again (thank goodness!) till the
-momentous interview between us in October, from which I emerged a free
-man; she having discovered in a boarding-house at Lucerne an architect
-named Byles, whom she’d the sense to see was a more determined wooer
-than I had ever been, and likely to make her a far better husband.
-
-“The French Horn” is not an old house, having been built in about the
-year 1830, from designs made by Mr. Thatcher’s father, who had copied it
-from an inn he had once stayed in in Spain. For a country gentleman of
-old family, the father seems to have been a somewhat remarkable person.
-He had, for instance, been an intimate friend of the celebrated Lord
-Byron, and was the only man in England (so Mr. Thatcher always said) who
-knew the real story of the quarrel between the poet and his wife. Byron
-confided it to him at Pisa as the closest of secrets; but, as he had
-always told it to everybody when alive, and his son, my father-in-law,
-invariably did and still does the same, there must be a good many people
-in England by now who know all about it.
-
-In fact, there was scarcely a golfer or bicyclist came to the house but
-Mr. Thatcher didn’t fix him sooner or later in the bar and ask him if he
-knew the real reason why Byron quarrelled with his wife and left
-England. And as it was a hundred to one chance that they didn’t, Mr.
-Thatcher always informed them in a loud, husky whisper, and shouted
-after them as they left, “But you mustn’t publish it, because it’s a
-family secret!”
-
-And the reason was, according to Mr. Thatcher, that Lord Byron had
-killed a country girl when a young man (somebody he’d got into trouble,
-I suppose) and flung her body in the pond at Newstead; and that having,
-in a moment of loving expansion, bragged of it to his wife, Lady Byron
-had, very properly, promptly kicked him out of the house in Piccadilly;
-which, also according to Mr. Thatcher, was the origin of those touching
-lines:
-
- “They tell me ’tis decided you depart:
- ’Tis wise, ’tis well, but not the less a pain,”
-
-invariably quoted by him on the departure of a guest.
-
-It was this same father of Mr. Thatcher’s who had parted with Wharton
-Park, their ancestral home. He had been a great gambler in his youth,
-and lost enormous sums at Crockford’s and on the turf, so that when he
-died, in 1850, he had nothing to leave his only son, my Lucy’s father,
-but three or four thousand pounds, very soon muddled away in unfortunate
-business speculations.
-
-At last, about twenty years ago, it occurred to Mr. Thatcher to come
-down to Nesshaven and take “The French Horn,” close to the Park gates of
-his old home, where, until the golf mania set in, beyond gaining a bare
-livelihood, he did no particular good; having to depend on
-natural-history lunatics, who came there in winter and prowled the shore
-with shot-guns after rare birds, and, in summer, on families from
-Colchester—tradespeople and bank-clerks and so on—who spent their
-holidays lying about in the warm sand among the whins and complaining of
-the food. Betweenwhiles there was scarcely a soul about except the
-coast-guards, who came up to fill their whiskey-bottles, and a few
-bicyclists who ate enormous teas and never would pay more than
-ninepence.
-
-But when a Colchester builder erected the club-house down on the links,
-Mr. Thatcher’s business looked up wonderfully, and he really began to
-make money, and even sometimes to turn it away, for the house was small.
-Harold Forsyth discovered it, being quartered so near, and it was he who
-introduced me, for which I can never be sufficiently grateful.
-
-It was a curious place, as most amateur buildings are. Forsyth had not
-told me anything about it, and I was indeed astonished when we first
-drove up; for, with its colored bricks, veranda, high-pitched roof, and
-odd carved wood-work, it reminded me somehow of an illustration to _Don
-Quixote_, and I quite expected to see a team of belled mules and hear
-the gay castanet click of the fandango. Instead of which, out came Mr.
-Thatcher in a dirty old cricket blazer.
-
-It was towards the middle of June, and the sun was just setting at the
-end of a long, warm day. Mr. Thatcher showed us our rooms, and then took
-us into the great hall up-stairs, from which a balcony and steps
-descended into the garden. It had a very high-pitched roof, and was
-decorated in the Moorish fashion (rather like the old London Crystal
-Palace; where, by-the-way, I have eaten pop-corn many a time as a boy,
-but cannot honestly say I ever enjoyed it), and would hold, I dare say,
-a hundred and fifty people; rather senseless, I thought, seeing there
-were only seven or eight bedrooms, but possibly useful for bean-feasts
-or a printer’s wayz-goose.
-
-The broad June sun was setting, as I say, and streamed right in from the
-garden, as Forsyth and I ate our dinner. The only other guests were two
-brothers named Walton, who spent their lives playing golf. They played
-at Nesshaven all day, and wrote accounts of it every night, sitting
-close together, smoking and mumbling about the condition of the greens
-and their tee-shots, all of which was solemnly committed to paper.
-
-What they would have done with themselves twenty years ago I can’t
-conceive—possibly taken to drink. At any rate, now they only live for
-golf, and their thick legs and indifferent play are to be seen wherever
-there’s a links and they can get permission to perform.
-
-Mr. Thatcher’s wife, a doctor’s daughter, had long been dead; but his
-old mother, of the astonishing age of ninety-three, was still alive, and
-lived with him in the inn. At first she had not at all liked the idea of
-settling down almost at the gates of Wharton Park, her old home; but
-every year since they came she had expected would be her last, and she
-only lived on on sufferance, as it were, in the hope she would soon die.
-Sprier old lady, however, I must say, I never saw. She wasn’t in the
-least deaf, and never wore glasses, and she was simply the keenest hand
-at bezique I ever encountered; at which entertaining game, by-the-way,
-if she wasn’t watched, she would cheat outrageously.
-
-She came of a good old Norfolk family, and actually remembered the
-jubilee of George III. in 1810; but when asked for details of that
-touching and patriotic event, all she could say was, “Well, I remember
-the blacksmith’s children dressed in white.”
-
-Old Mrs. Thatcher and I were great friends, and used to potter about the
-garden together in the early mornings. Farther abroad she never
-ventured, except once a year, I believe, when she trotted off to the
-church to visit her husband’s grave and see the tablet inside was kept
-clean.
-
-So June and part of July slipped away, diversified, as I have explained,
-by a visit to London and some melancholy pleasures sipped in Mabel
-Harker’s society, from which I returned to “The French Horn” in a truly
-desperate and pitiable frame of mind. Indeed, so low and forlorn was I
-at times that Mr. Thatcher, with great sympathy, once or twice fetched
-me out a bottle of old port (and not bad tipple, either, for a country
-inn), which we drank together, while he related to me at some length the
-misfortunes of his life.
-
-Chief among them was the loss of his ancestral home, Wharton Park. The
-Thatchers had lived there since the first of them, a Lord Mayor of the
-time of Henry VIII., had built the house in the year 1543—of which
-original structure only the stables, in an extremely ramshackle
-condition, remained. A drunken Thatcher with a bedroom candle had burned
-the rest, towards the end of the last century, when the present house
-was built by my father-in-law’s grandfather; a bad man, apparently,
-since though he had a wife and children established in Portman Square,
-he kept a mistress in one of the wings of Wharton Park, where one night
-she went suddenly raving mad (treading on her long boa and believing it
-a serpent come from the lower regions to claim and devour her), and
-filled the air with her screechings till, a year later, she died.
-
-Mr. Thatcher’s father had mortgaged the place heavily to Mr. Crage, an
-attorney and moneylender of Clement’s Inn, and soon after his death, in
-1850, the mortgage was foreclosed, and Mr. Crage took possession and had
-lived there with great disrepute ever since. He was a very vile old man,
-who had killed his wife with ill-treatment and turned his daughters
-out-of-doors; no female domestic servant was safe from his dreadful
-advances, and at last he was left with no one to serve him but the
-gardener and his wife, with whom, especially when they all got drunk
-together on gin-and-water in the kitchen, he was as often as not engaged
-in hand-to-hand fighting.
-
-When I first saw him he was well over eighty, and a more
-abandoned-looking old villain I never set eyes on; with a gashed,
-slobbering mouth, in which the yellow teeth stuck up out of the
-under-jaw like an old hound’s; a broken nose, which had once been
-hooked, until displaced by a young carpenter in the village, whose
-sweetheart he had been rude to; and the most extraordinary, bushy, black
-eyebrows. His hand shook so he always cut himself shaving, and his chin
-was always dabbled with dry blood. In short, a more malignant and gaunt
-personality I never saw, as I first did quite close, leaning on a gate
-and mumbling to himself, dressed in a tight body-coat, gaiters, and a
-dull, square, black hat, like a horse-coper’s.
-
-I remember he called out to me over the gate in a rasping voice, “Hi,
-there, you young Cockney! what’s the time?” Whereupon I haughtily
-replied it was time he thought of his latter end and behaved himself. At
-which he fell to cursing and shaking his stick, and making sham,
-impotent efforts to get over the gate. For they told me he was mortally
-afraid of dying, as all bad (and, for the matter of that, many good) men
-are. He knew, of course, Mr. Thatcher was the rightful owner of the
-place, and he would sometimes come down to “The French Horn” and jeer
-him about it, offering it for £30,000, which, he dared say, Mr. Thatcher
-had in the house. And more than once, curse his senile impudence! Mr.
-Thatcher told me he had offered to marry Lucy!—but this is really too
-horrible a subject to be dwelt on.
-
-In short, I loathed the old wretch so heartily that it was perhaps the
-happiest moment of my life (with the exception of that blessed February
-morning when I stood at the altar of Nesshaven church with Lucy and
-heard her sweet and tremulous “I will”) when, after our triumphant
-return from Monte Carlo, Mr. Thatcher and I went up to Wharton Park with
-the £30,000 in notes and gold and paid the old ruffian out over the
-coarse kitchen-table, almost the only furniture of the grand
-drawing-room, where there were still the old yellow silk hangings—as
-will all come in its place, later on.
-
-Lucy Thatcher at this time, in June and July, was staying with her aunt,
-Miss Young, her mother’s sister, who kept a girls’ school in the
-Ladbroke Grove Road, out at Notting Hill. She taught some of the younger
-children and made herself generally useful, taking them out walks in
-Kensington Gardens; for Mr. Thatcher wisely thought her too beautiful to
-be always at “The French Horn,” since bicyclists and golfers are
-somewhat apt to be too boldly attentive to the lovely faces they meet
-with on their roundabouts. Nor can I altogether blame them. So, as I
-have said, I never saw her till my return in September, when her beauty
-and modesty—which in my judgment are synonymous—at once captured me,
-and always will hold me captive till I die.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- I CONTINUE TO KEEP OUT OF MABEL HARKER’S WAY AND GO TO GORING—
- RETURN TO “THE FRENCH HORN”—WANDERINGS WITH LUCY—MR. CRAGE
- REHEARSES HIS OWN FUNERAL
-
-
-AS August approached I began to feel apprehensive as to the right course
-to pursue with regard to Mabel Harker, my _fiancée_. I don’t want to say
-anything unkind about her here in print, but, the fact is, the
-engagement had been an unfortunate one from the first. Let me only
-observe that I really honestly think if a man is to choose between
-behaving like a brute (as people say you do when you break off an
-engagement) and making himself miserable for life (as I most certainly
-should if I had married Mabel), he had much better select the former
-course. At any rate, I know now that if I had had the brutality, or the
-courage, to tell Mabel point-blank at first that I was very sorry, but I
-didn’t care for her sufficiently to marry her, I should have spared
-myself a vast deal of annoyance and self-reproach, which now I
-understand to have been altogether unnecessary; seeing, I know now very
-well, she didn’t really care for me in the least, but simply regarded me
-as a lay-figure (with eight hundred a year) to stand beside her at the
-altar rails and mechanically say “_I will_” and “_I do_” and the rest of
-it.
-
-After her visit to her sister’s in the Regent’s Park, in July, she had
-gone back to Folkestone, and I was in some tremor whether she might not
-desire me to spend the holiday months with them there; but, most
-fortunately, Mrs. Harker, her aunt, received a very good offer for her
-house in Clifton Gardens, which she determined to take, and go abroad to
-Switzerland, where she and Mabel could live in a _pension_ and save
-quite three-fourths of the home rent.
-
-Mabel wanted me to join them, but I managed to get out of it, and very
-lucky I did; for it was at that very _pension_ at Lucerne she met
-Charles Byles, the architect, her present husband, and a great ass he
-must have looked with that small face of his and huge mustache, and a
-rope round him for going up Pilatus; besides being slightly bandy.
-
-As for me, I went off down to my sister’s, Mrs. Rivers, married to the
-publisher, who had taken a little house on the river at Taplow, where I
-spent the end of August and early part of September with great content,
-more especially in the middle of the week, when my precious
-brother-in-law (a dull fellow and a prig) was away doing his publishing
-in town.
-
-I left Taplow the second week in September, and something gentle, yet
-persuasive and strong, seeming to call me back to “The French Horn,” off
-I went there; and there, as I have already mentioned, I met and fell
-madly in love with Lucy Thatcher at first sight, a passion deepening to
-a tempest before October dawned.
-
-Now, as I am telling the truth in this work, and not writing a romance,
-I have to admit that the month I had of Lucy’s dear companionship,
-before I knew I was free, was by no means spent idly, and that I made
-all the running with her of which my amorous wits are capable, just as
-though I had been really unappropriated.
-
-Nor was this altogether wrong, for I felt quite sure Providence would
-stand my good friend, as always in such affairs before, and direct Mabel
-Harker’s hopes into another, sounder matrimonial channel than mine. Even
-if Providence had not, but had stood aloof and fought shy, I should then
-most certainly have deemed it necessary to play the part myself, seeing
-how deeply and truly my heart was now _for the first time_ engaged.
-
-Dear! dear! at what amazing speed that happy month flew past; how little
-there seems I can say about it now. Isn’t it strange that Time, whom
-poets prefigure as an ancient person with anchylosed joints, further
-encumbered, notwithstanding his great age, with a scythe and an enormous
-hour-glass, is yet on occasion capable of showing the panting hurry of a
-sprinter?
-
-With Lucy I was alone almost all the time, for Mr. Thatcher, very
-properly, wouldn’t allow her to help in the bar—a department he
-gracefully presided over himself in his dirty blazer, grasping the
-handle of the beer engine, and sometimes, on Saturday nights mostly,
-slightly shaken with a gentlemanly but unmistakable attack of hiccoughs.
-So dear Lucy had nothing much to do but go bathing and help her
-grandmother in the garden, gathering the plums and raking down the
-ripening apples. And though there were days when, womanlike, she shunned
-me and kept out of my way (so as not to make herself too cheap), yet she
-was very frank and simple and trusting in giving me at other times her
-constant companionship; and as on the days when she desired to be more
-alone I always respected her wish and kept away (just turning at the
-fourth hole on the links to watch her light, firm figure crossing down
-to her bathing-tent on the shore, and waving the putter at her), she
-was, as she has since told me, pleased at my delicacy and perception,
-and showed her pleasure when we again met by the extraordinary
-brightness of her eyes and the sweet readiness of her smile.
-
-It was harvest-time, and though Mr. Thatcher had no acreage of his own,
-still there was plenty of it round him under cultivation, and a fine
-time it was for the Tap, for which there was a separate entrance, with a
-painted hand pointing to it for those who couldn’t read. While my
-sweetheart and I strolled about the lanes by day, gathering blackberries
-and plucking at the wisps of corn caught by the high hedges and low
-branches from the passing wagons, on warm evenings we would sit alone in
-the garden, listening to the hearty rustic revelry of premature
-harvest-homes from the inn, and, when it was very still, hearing the
-faint, mysterious rustle of the waves on the long, sandy shore, as
-though the lulling sea were whispering to the land, “Hush! hush! now go
-to sleep like a good child. You’ve had a long day and must be
-tired—_hush!_”
-
-It was at this time, as I very well remember, we strolled up late one
-afternoon to Wharton Park, her old ancestral home, and a very curious
-and unedifying sight we witnessed there. We went in at the empty lodge
-gates, and had a look in first at the church in the Park grounds, of
-which Mr. Thatcher kept the key in the bar; for there was no rectory,
-and the parson came over only on Sundays from Nesshaven for an afternoon
-service—at six in summer and at three in winter.
-
-The ancient, bird-haunted edifice was pretty full of deceased
-Thatchers—all of them, in fact, I believe, lie there, except the Lord
-Mayor of Henry VIII.’s reign, who gets what rest he can in a church off
-Cornhill, and Mr. Thatcher’s grandfather, who is buried out at Florence;
-and where there aren’t tablets and tombs of old-time, worthy Thatchers,
-there are kindly memorials to their servants, house-keepers, and
-bailiffs for forty years and so on; which when Lucy and I had duly and
-reverently inspected and sighed over, we had a peep in at the vestry,
-where hung the parson’s crisp surplice behind a piece of religious
-arras, and a framed and glazed view of Wharton in 1750 (the mansion that
-was burned), with pompous gentlemen in three-cornered hats giving their
-hands to ladies in immense hoops up the centre path; and a tattered,
-begrimed notice of the reign of Queen Anne, affording the clergy
-instructions for sending parishioners up to St. James’s to be touched
-for the king’s evil.
-
-And when we had mourned over these things, and inspected the fragment of
-the holy-water scoop, and the blunt, whitewashed squint, and the broken
-place where once the mass-priests sat, and the Wharton pew, with an icy
-cold stove in it and a little frame of dingy red curtain hung round on
-rods and rings, so that the hinds shouldn’t see when the quality
-Thatchers fell asleep—not in the Lord!—on drowsy summer Sunday
-afternoons—as, alas! they haven’t had the opportunity of doing for many
-years past now; then we went on up to the house, leaving the drive,
-however, and dodging across the fields to the _ha-ha_, for fear of
-meeting that old villain Crage.
-
-We got up through a small spinney to the end of the ha-ha that faces the
-house, and, as we were quite close, saw with our own eyes a most strange
-and monstrous sight—a sight so strange that many readers would scarcely
-credit it, had they not noticed that truth and not fiction is my object.
-
-Hidden in the spinney, we were not more than forty yards from the house,
-which is long and low and not particularly beautiful—in fact, decidedly
-Gothic and unsightly. In front of it, lengthways and pretty broad, runs
-a gravel path, and up and down that broad gravel path was stamping and
-swearing old Mr. Crage; stamping and swearing and shaking his stick at
-six men (laborers of his, Lucy said, and all men she knew) who were
-actually carrying a coffin, a smart, brand-new coffin with dandy silver
-handles, on their shoulders.
-
-The old wretch was positively rehearsing his own funeral! We could very
-plainly hear him cursing the men for walking too fast and jolting him,
-and so on; as though, once the miserable old hunks were cold, it
-mattered how anybody carried him.
-
-Then he made them rest the coffin on one end while he showed them
-himself the pace they should travel and the demeanor they ought to
-exhibit; and truly, if it hadn’t been scandalous and horrible it would
-have been ludicrous to see the way the blaspheming old scamp trailed the
-path before them, dragging one foot along after another, with head and
-shoulders bent in sham sorrow and reverence; trying, in short, to
-play-act the distressed, grief-stricken mourner, touched to the quick at
-his own loss.
-
-When he had finished his parade, he shook his stick at the six men, and
-cursed them, raving and foaming, for damned scoundrels and thieves and
-disrespectful ruffians, who would be glad to see him dead, and would
-whistle and dance while carrying him off, instead of doing it all in the
-proper depressed manner he had just shown them; while the men stood and
-looked at him stupidly and sullenly, and, I’ve no doubt, would have
-liked to jump on him there and then and beat him to a pulp, finishing
-once and for all with so dreadful a mockery by making it real.
-
-Dear Lucy and I stole away, quite shocked and silent. Afterwards she
-told me old Crage had had the coffin a long time, and rehearsed the
-funeral once before; but that lately, having by threats of an action
-screwed twenty pounds out of his daughter for money he had lent her (on
-which, by-the-way, Miss Crage had promptly run away and got married), he
-had had the silver handles added; and, now that the coffin was, in his
-estimation, quite perfect, had doubtless gone through the unholy
-ceremony again, so that when the hour struck there might be no excuse
-for a hitch.
-
-So Lucy and I stole away back to “The French Horn” in shocked silence.
-Pleasant and human it sounded, when we got on the road again, to hear a
-carter singing as he rattled homeward in his empty wagon.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- I AM FREE OF MABEL HARKER—RETURN TO “THE FRENCH HORN”—DISASTROUS
- INTERFERENCE OF HAROLD FORSYTH IN MY AFFAIRS
-
-
-IT was the 13th of October, as I very well remember, that, shortly after
-Mabel’s return to England from Switzerland, she wrote me an incoherent
-epistle, begging me to come up to town and see her at once, for that she
-was the most miserable of girls and had sad news for me, signed “your
-heartbroken Mabel.” I must say I was glad to hear it, and greatly looked
-forward to the sad news; since I very well knew it could only be that
-another wooer had stepped up on to the Regent’s Park _tapis_, and one a
-good deal more determined to win her than I. Directly I got there and
-found the fire wasn’t lit in the drawing-room, though it was horribly
-cold, I knew I was right, and the interview was meant to be brief and
-painful.
-
-It was the same room, by-the-way (though the fire had been lit for us
-then!) in which I had made my unfortunate declaration in the early
-spring, soon after Easter—a declaration precipitated by Mabel, who
-began playing the piano, but soon broke down over it and wept, alleging
-me to be the cause of her unhappiness; which, being uncommon
-tender-hearted where the sex are concerned, completely bowled me over
-and drove me to propose.
-
-When she came in this time, with melancholy mouth but unmistakably
-triumphant eyes, she at once told me the sad news; to which I listened
-with as gloomy a face as I could, demanding in hoarse tones the name of
-my successful rival. I could scarcely contain my mirth when I heard it
-was Byles, the man she had so often laughed at in her letters from
-Lucerne, as girls not infrequently do at the man they are one day
-destined to marry. But I must say I think she might at any rate have
-_offered_ to send me my presents back, for there are many of them
-(particularly a diamond and sapphire ring—cost me eighteen pounds) I
-should have liked to have given Lucy. I make no manner of doubt that if
-it had been garnets and carnelian, I should have had it back at once in
-a registered letter.
-
-Directly our painful interview was over, I hurried back to Nesshaven and
-“The French Horn,” feeling happier than I had done for months past, a
-free man, and my heart beating so rapturously I believe an old lady in
-the carriage with me heard it, she looked so frightened at my
-restlessness.
-
-But at “The French Horn” a blow awaited me, from which, when I think of
-it, I yet reel; for judge of my stupor when, on my gay return, I was
-met, not by Lucy, towards whom I was so impetuously rushing to tell all,
-but by the whiskified thunders of Mr. Thatcher, who took me at once into
-the bar-parlor, and proceeded there and then to claw me about the ears
-with the angry rhetoric of a theatrically outraged heavy father.
-
-Of course he was quite right; but then I was myself _now_ quite right,
-too; and when he talked in real Adelphi fashion about stealing
-affections and repaying him in this way, I was—thank Heaven!—in a
-position to be angry too, and give him as good as he gave me.
-
-So I let him fume on till he ran himself down, when I temperately
-explained what my position really was, and how I was altogether free;
-and how, above all, that if Lucy cared for me, as I very well knew she
-did, I was going to marry her at once, and (if not precisely in the
-immediate neighborhood of “The French Horn”) settle down and live
-happily ever after.
-
-Whereupon Mr. Thatcher’s easily corrugated brow began as easily to
-clear, and he steadied himself and seized and shook me by the wrong
-hand. So we sat down and had a cigar and a split whiskey-and-soda, and
-he was good enough to say he had known all along (from the way I had
-always paid my bill, I suppose) that he could trust me implicitly, and
-all would come right in the end.
-
-But in the meantime he had shipped off dear Lucy to her aunt’s school in
-the Ladbroke Grove Road, where she had gone back—very tearfully, poor
-child, at the news of my supposed treachery—to her altogether
-uncongenial employment with the younger children.
-
-By judicious pumping I discovered it was Harold Forsyth who had blown
-upon me and “queered my pitch,” as showmen say, having come over from
-Colchester to play golf, and been seized upon by the watchful Thatcher,
-who of course had noticed my unremitting attentions to his daughter.
-Upon which Harold, either because he fancied it his duty (old friends
-are often very inconsiderate) or from sheer stupidity, had let slip the
-disastrous news of my engagement to another lady; though, as a matter of
-fact, at the very moment of their conversation it was off and I was
-free.
-
-Old Mrs. Thatcher took the situation in at a glance, and, either from a
-natural desire to see her granddaughter properly settled or from pure
-friendship for me, who had always been attentive to her, and once took a
-bee out of her hair (that animal being almost the only living thing she
-really feared), immediately suggested I should go off at once to the
-Ladbroke Grove Road, provided with a letter to the aunt from Mr.
-Thatcher, in which everything was explained, and I was given authority
-to interview and settle matters with my dear sweetheart. So, next
-morning early, off I drove to Nesshaven Station in the milk cart, gay as
-a lark—that chorister of the poor and the cheerful well-to-do—and by
-twelve o’clock was rattling in a cab down the Ladbroke Grove Road.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- ANGLESEY LODGE—MY INTERVIEW WITH LUCY IN KENSINGTON GARDENS—NOT
- SO SATISFACTORY AS I COULD DESIRE
-
-
-THERE was a piano-organ playing in front of Anglesey Lodge as I drove
-up; it was playing the old “Les Roses” waltz, and quite dramatic and
-affecting the music sounded as I impatiently waited in the drawing-room,
-hung with Doré’s works to impress parents, and with a model of the Taj
-under glass, done in soapstone, and sent by some girl-pupil, I imagine,
-who had married and gone out to India.
-
-The aunt soon joined me, smiling, with Mr. Thatcher’s open letter in her
-hand, and a very handsome woman she must have been—indeed, still
-was—with traces, on a florid scale, of Lucy’s simple and yet delicate
-beauty.
-
-She was so friendly, and made herself so fascinating, it was fully half
-an hour before I could get away. She told me Lucy was out with some of
-the pupils, and that, if I went to Kensington Gardens and walked down
-the Broad Walk, I should be sure to see them. Further, if we made it up
-(as we surely should, she graciously added), she begged me to come back
-to lunch at half-past one; though she must ask me not to walk home with
-the young ladies through the streets for fear of adverse neighborly
-comments, and upsetting them for the afternoon studies.
-
-I was soon at the entrance to the gardens in the Bayswater Road, where
-the keeper’s lodge is, with its glass bottles of sweets and half-penny
-rock-buns; and, true enough, there was dear Lucy, sitting on one of the
-seats facing the walk, reading to one of the little girls, while the
-other bigger ones, perhaps half a dozen of them, were playing rounders
-in French, among the trees and the dead leaves.
-
-“_Combien de rounders avez-vous?_” cried one of them as I came up; and
-“_Courrez, Maud, courrez!_” cried another, clapping her hands, as the
-tennis-ball in its torn cover whizzed close by me, whacked by a young
-person with a racquet, who was soon off on her round in a short frock
-but with uncommonly long legs.
-
-I came quite close behind Lucy, taking care not to make the leaves
-rustle. She was reading Bonnechose’s _History of France_ aloud,
-something about the wars of the Fronde and Cardinal Richelieu.
-
-“‘_The conduct of the cardinal at this juncture_—’” she was saying with
-great seriousness, when the little girl beside her, who naturally wasn’t
-attending, looked up and saw me. I gave her a friendly smile, and after
-that moment’s careful scrutiny which females of all ages indulge in, she
-smiled back. The next moment Lucy looked at her and then round up at me,
-giving a soft, frightened “Hah!” and then going as white as a sheet.
-
-Really, it is quite impossible to say at what age a comprehension of
-love, its torments and its joys, arises in the fresh girlish breast. The
-pretty creature seated at Lucy’s side couldn’t have been more than
-eleven, but she saw at once I loved her teacher and desired to be alone
-with her; so she immediately rose, staid and composed as a woman, shook
-her long hair, and, with complete unconsciousness, strolled off and
-joined the other older girls; while they, not to be behindhand in
-delicacy, soon stopped their somewhat noisy game, and, forming a
-sympathetic group at some little distance under an elm, stood there
-talking in whispers with their backs to us; pretending to be immensely
-interested and absorbed in the ’buses rumbling down the Bayswater Road.
-
-But for her little frightened cry, Lucy received me in silence, and
-didn’t even give me her hand. She sat there on the seat—cut and scarred
-with other, happier lovers’ records—with her head slightly turned away
-from me; perfectly composed, apparently, after the first shock and
-natural agitation of seeing me again so suddenly were over.
-
-I asked her how she was and how long she had been in town; she said she
-was quite well, and had been there since the day before yesterday.
-
-Then she said, calmly, “Can you tell me the time, please?” and on my
-replying it was a quarter to one, murmured she must be going home to
-dinner, and made as if she would rise.
-
-I stopped her with, “Please, Lucy, let me speak to you first.” So she
-remained perfectly still, though with her pretty head still turned away
-from me.
-
-Eloquent, or, at all events, talkative, as I generally am with the sex,
-I admit I couldn’t for the life of me tell how to begin.
-
-At last I said I was afraid she must think badly of me, and then waited
-of course for her contradiction; but as it never came, and she never
-made a sign, I went on to say I shouldn’t dare approach her were it not
-I was a free man; that my affair with—with the other lady was finally
-at an end, and so I came to her first and at once with my whole heart.
-As I spoke, I watched her closely, if only in the hope I might detect
-some slight twitching of her small ungloved hands, or some involuntary
-twittering of her eyes or lips, when I told her I was free; but she sat
-so like an antique, or, for the matter of that, a modern statue, I began
-to grow frightened, since I know very well how implacable even the
-tenderest of women can sometimes be when it suits them.
-
-“Oh, Lucy dear!” I stammered, “d-don’t be hard on me. I loved you the
-moment I saw you. I never really loved the other one. Since the day I
-first set eyes on you, I have never given any other woman a serious
-thought. You can’t be so unkind as to break my life in pieces, merely
-because I’ve been careless, merely because I spoke to you before I was
-quite sure I was free? Why, I was free of her directly I saw you, and if
-she hadn’t released me of her own accord, as she has done—Oh, Lucy!
-don’t leave me in this dreadful suspense! Do, my dear girl, say
-something kind to me, for mercy’s sake!”
-
-“I don’t feel kindly towards you, Mr. Blacker,” Lucy answered, cold and
-stern, “and I can’t pretend. I know quite well what’s happened. You
-thought I was only an innkeeper’s daughter—”
-
-“Oh, Lucy!”
-
-“And that so long as you were staying there you might as well amuse
-yourself.”
-
-“Love is no amusement, Lucy—it’s a most fearful trial.”
-
-“But did you ever, when you were daring to make love to me,” she said,
-suddenly turning on me with amazing fierceness, “even cease writing love
-letters to her? Tell me that, Mr. Vincent Blacker!”
-
-I groaned; for the truth is I had written more warmly to Mabel Harker
-all that delightful month at “The French Horn” than usual; from the
-simple fact that, myself feeling happier, I naturally wished Mabel to
-share, in a sense, in my joy. So what could I do but groan?
-
-“If we hadn’t found out quite by accident you were engaged,” Lucy went
-on, “should we have ever found it out from you? Were you making any
-effort of any sort to free yourself? You were acting an untruth to me
-all that time. How can I tell you are not acting an untruth to me now?”
-
-“I wasn’t in the least acting an untruth when I said I loved you. How
-can you say such a thing, Lucy dear?”
-
-“You mustn’t call me by my Christian name,” she answered, pale, and
-setting her lips tight; and then she was silent again.
-
-“You are very hard on me,” I cried, after a pause, “and I hope you will
-never live to regret it. What could a man do differently, situate so
-unfortunately as I was?”
-
-“You should have been perfectly honest and frank. At least, you should
-have made sure you were off with the old love before you tried to be on
-with the new.”
-
-“But you talk as if these things always lay within our power! I didn’t
-purposely fall in love with you—I simply couldn’t help myself! And into
-the other affair I had been more or less entrapped.”
-
-“Yes,” she replied, with some scorn, “and three months hence you will be
-saying exactly the same thing to the next girl.”
-
-“I shall never speak to any one again,” I answered, solemnly and truly,
-“as I am speaking now to you. You can believe me or not, as you please,
-but I can never think of any one as I think of you, and I never have. If
-you will only think of me kindly, and try to make excuses for me; if you
-will only consult your own heart a little—”
-
-“I mustn’t allow myself to be turned round by a few soft speeches,” said
-Lucy, looking almost frightened and rising before I could prevent her.
-“You have hurt me very much, and I don’t know that my feelings will ever
-alter, or that I should allow them to.”
-
-“But you will let me see you again?” I humbly entreated.
-
-“I don’t know. Certainly not for some little time.”
-
-“I may write to you?”
-
-“No, certainly not!”
-
-“This is all very poor comfort, Lucy,” I groaned, “after the journey I
-have taken on purpose to see you and make it all right.”
-
-“What other comfort do you deserve, Mr. Blacker?” she asked me,
-haughtily, and immediately moved away from the seat towards her young
-ladies.
-
-“I will come down at Christmas, if I may,” I said, tenderly and humbly;
-but she never replied, and the next moment was marshalling the girls for
-walking home.
-
-They walked to the gate in the Bayswater Road in a group, and formed up
-two and two as they got outside.
-
-Lucy never turned her head once, but nearly every young lady treated
-herself to a look behind; when they might have seen me plunged down in
-melancholy on the seat, digging a morose pattern into the Broad Walk
-with the point of my stick.
-
-I drawled back unhappily across the Gardens and down the empty Row to
-Hyde Park Corner, along Piccadilly, and to the club.
-
-Christmas! and this was only October!
-
-Sympathetic readers (and I desire no others) can have no conception what
-I suffered during the next few days.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- EARLY DIFFICULTIES—I FAIL TO PERSUADE THE HONORABLE EDGAR
- FANSHAWE, THE REVEREND PERCY BLYTH, AND MR. PARKER WHITE, M. P.,
- TO JOIN OUR MONTE CARLO PARTY
-
-
-LUCY declares I have written enough about her, and now had better get on
-to the Monte Carlo part—who went with me, and why they went, and so on.
-
-I dare say she’s right; for though we neither of us know anything
-whatever about writing, she says she represents the average reader, and,
-having been told (as well as I could do it) something about “The French
-Horn” and my love-affair there, is, as an average reader, growing
-anxious to learn how I got the party together for so apparently
-hazardous, not to say hopeless, an enterprise.
-
-I must just mention, however, that, after my sad interview with her in
-Kensington Gardens, I at once wrote to Mr. Thatcher and told him exactly
-what had occurred, informing him of my intention to come down at
-Christmas and try and settle matters with his daughter. At the same time
-I begged him to send me up the clothes and portmanteaus I had left
-behind me at “The French Horn.” They arrived, accompanied by a scrawl
-from Mr. Thatcher, urging me to be a man and bear up and all would come
-right, and enclosing a rather larger bill than I fancied I owed, but
-which I thought it politic to pay without protest of any kind.
-
-Even the old lady, his mother, sent me a line, in a very upright fist,
-kindly informing me “brighter days were in store.” A simple prophecy,
-that long has ceased to interest me; since I have invariably had it from
-the innumerable fortunetellers, by cards and tea-leaves and the crystal,
-whom for years past I have rather foolishly been in the habit of
-consulting, but never derived any real benefit from.
-
-As for my great idea to sack Monte Carlo, it came to me one morning
-(quite unexpectedly, as I have said) when I was lying in bed, trying to
-summon up resolution to rise for another dull and irksome day. It was
-still a long time off Christmas, and life was lying on me with extreme
-heaviness; for, as I think I have explained, I am in the militia, and
-when once my month’s training is over have nothing to do with myself
-except live on my eight hundred a year and amuse myself as best I can;
-and my idleness was rendered further indigestible at this period by the
-unhappy state of my relations with dear Lucy, whom I could neither see
-nor write to.
-
-But the idea that I should get a small, resolute party together, and
-raid the tables at Monte Carlo, brought a new interest into my life; and
-after making a few quiet and judicious inquiries (for I had never been
-there), I determined to set about the affair in earnest and see if I
-could get any one to join me.
-
-My first efforts in that direction, as is generally the case with
-anything new and startling, were not at all successful; but the more
-opposition and ridicule I met with, the more obstinate and determined I
-became. As for the morality of the affair, that, as I have said, has
-never troubled me from first to last. Does any one think of calling the
-police immoral when they go and raid a silver gambling-hell in Soho? For
-the life of me I have never been able to see the difference between us,
-except that _in our case_ there was needed a greater nerve and address.
-
-Now my sister, Mrs. Rivers, the wife of the publisher, lives in Medworth
-Square, S. W., and, on considering her intimates, I made up my mind to
-approach the Honorable Edgar Fanshawe first. He has a brother in the
-Foreign Office, and relations scattered about everywhere in government
-employ, so I decided he would be a good man to have with us in case the
-affair proved a _fiasco_ and we all got into trouble, a chance that
-naturally had to be provided for.
-
-Fanshawe, I should explain, was at one time in the Guards, but now
-writes the most dreadfully dull historical novels, which my
-brother-in-law publishes, and no one that I have ever met reads. Every
-autumn, sure as fate, among the firm’s list of new books you see
-announced, _Something or Other, a Tale of the Young Pretender_; or,
-_Something or Other Else, an Episode of the Reign of Terror_; with
-quotations from the _Scots Herald_, “this enthralling story”; or, from
-the _Dissenters’ Times_, “no more powerful and picturesque romance has
-at present issued,” etc. Or _The Leeds Commercial Gazette_ would declare
-it “the best historical novel since Scott,” which I seem to have heard
-before of many other dull works.
-
-Fanshawe is a purring, mild, genteel, rather elderly person, who listens
-to everything you are good enough to say most attentively and politely,
-with his head on one side, and never will be parted from his opera-hat.
-When I attacked him one night after dinner in Medworth Square he was in
-his usual autumnal condition of beatitude at the excellence of the
-reviews of his latest historical composition (which, as usual, scarcely
-sold), and beamed on me with delighted condescension, stuffing
-quantities of raisins.
-
-“What shall you be doing in January?” I cautiously began. “Would you be
-free for a little run over to Monte Carlo?”
-
-Unfortunately, the Honorable Edgar is the sort of person who, half an
-hour after dinner, will undertake to do anything with anybody, and then
-write and get out of it immediately after breakfast next morning, when
-he’s cold; so I quite expected the reply that Monte Carlo in January
-would suit him exactly, and what hotel did I propose to stay at?
-
-“Now I’ve an idea,” I went on, drawing a little closer. “You’ve been to
-Monte Carlo, of course, and know what a quantity of money there is in
-the place.”
-
-“Some of it mine,” smiled Fanshawe. “I beg your pardon for interrupting
-you.”
-
-“Well,” I said, “how would you like to join a little party of us for the
-purpose of getting it back?”
-
-“A syndicate to work a system?”
-
-“Nothing so unprofitable.”
-
-“I don’t know of any other way.”
-
-“My idea,” I went on, sinking my voice, “is shortly this: that half a
-dozen of us should join and take a yacht—a fast steam-yacht—”
-
-“Rather an expensive way of doing it, isn’t it?” objected Fanshawe, in
-alarm. He doesn’t mind what he pays to have his books published, but is
-otherwise mean.
-
-“Not when you consider the magnitude of the stakes.”
-
-“Why, the most you can win, even if you break the bank, is only a
-hundred thousand francs!”
-
-“But consider the number of the tables, to say nothing of the reserve in
-the vaults, and the money lying about already staked!”
-
-The old boy looked puzzled, but nodded his head politely all the same.
-“That’s true,” he said, vaguely.
-
-“The place is not in any sense guarded, as no doubt you remember.”
-
-“No, I don’t know that I ever saw a soldier about, except one or two,
-very bored, on sentry go, up at Monaco. But what has that to do with
-it?”
-
-“Why, half a dozen resolute men with revolvers could clear the whole
-place out in five minutes,” I murmured, seductively. “The steam-yacht
-lies in the harbor, we collect the money, or as much of it as half a
-dozen of us can carry away, and, once on board the lugger—”
-
-Fanshawe pushed his chair back and stared at me.
-
-“—We go full-steam ahead to one of the Greek islands, divide the swag,
-scuttle the steamer, make our way to the Piræus, inspect the Acropolis,
-and come home, _viâ_ Corfu, as Cook’s tourists. Or go to the Holy Land,
-eh, by way of completely averting suspicion?” And I winked and nudged
-him, nearly falling over in my effort to get at his frail old ribs.
-
-“My dear friend!” gasped the startled Fanshawe; “why propose such an
-elaborate pleasantry? It’s like school-boy’s talk in a dormitory.”
-
-“I never felt further from my school-days in my life,” I answered with
-determination. “The affair is perfectly easy—easier than you think. All
-it wants is a little resolution, and the money’s ours.”
-
-“But it’s simple robbery.”
-
-“Oh, don’t imagine,” I at once replied, “I propose anything so coarse as
-burglary and the melting-pot. No; I say to myself, here is the most
-iniquitous establishment in Europe, simply reeking with gold, of which
-an enormous surplus remains at the end of the year to be divided,
-principally among Semitic Parisians, who lavish it on their miserable
-pleasures. Here, on the other hand, are numerous deserving
-establishments in London—hospitals and so on—with boards out, closing
-their wards and imploring subscriptions. The flow of gold has evidently
-got into the wrong channels, as it always will if not sharply looked
-after. Be ours the glorious enterprise to divert it anew—”
-
-“My good friend,” interrupted Fanshawe, “if I thought you serious—”
-
-“Never was more serious in my life!”
-
-“But, gracious me, suppose you’re all caught?”
-
-“Oh, there is a prison up at Monaco, I believe,” I answered, lightly;
-“but they tell me prisoners come and go just as they please. That
-doesn’t in the least alarm me. Besides, Europe would be on our side—at
-all events, the respectable portion of it—and would hail our _coup_
-with rapture, even if it ended in failure. And with your brother in the
-Foreign Office, they’d soon have you back. Now what do you say? Will you
-make one?”
-
-“My dear Blacker, you really must be crazy!”
-
-“At a given signal, when the rooms are fullest, some of us—two would be
-enough—drive the gamblers into a corner and make them hold up their
-hands. The others loot the tables and the vaults. Then we turn out the
-electric light—”
-
-“Any more wine, Fanshawe?” called out my brother-in-law.
-
-Fanshawe rose, and I saw at once by the limp way he pulled his waistcoat
-down he was no good.
-
-“Well,” I said, as I followed him into the drawing-room, “if you won’t
-join us, you must give me your word not to breathe a syllable of what we
-are going to do. It’s an immense idea, and I don’t want any one to get
-hold of it first, and find the place gutted by some one else before we
-can get a look in.”
-
-Fanshawe’s only reply was that if I got into trouble he would thank me
-not to apply to him to bail me out; so we mutually promised.
-
-I don’t know that, on the whole, I very much regretted him; he is, after
-all, a very muddle-headed, nervous old creature; but my hopes were for a
-time a good deal dashed by the refusal of the Reverend Percy Blyth to
-join us (much as he approved of the scheme), though I did my best to
-tempt him with the offer of new stops for his organ out of the boodle.
-He is the clergyman of St. Blaise’s, Medworth Square, and intimate with
-all the theatrical set, for whom he holds services at all sorts of odd
-hours; the natural result of which is he is on the free list of nearly
-every theatre, and has given me many a box.
-
-Now every school-boy knows how priceless the presence of a parson is to
-all human undertakings—on a race-course, for instance, for
-thimble-rigging, the three-card trick, and other devices. They call him
-the _bonnet_, and if you have any trifling dispute about there being no
-pea, or the corner of the card being turned down, you are likely to be
-very much astonished to find the clergyman (who, of course, is only a
-cove dressed up) take the proprietor’s part and, at a pinch, offer to
-fight you, or any other dissatisfied bystander.
-
-So I naturally thought it would be a good thing for us if we had a real
-parson in the party, if only as a most superior _bonnet_, to avert
-suspicion; though, if I had only thought a little, I might have known
-the idea wouldn’t work, since Blyth couldn’t very well have gone into
-the Casino rooms in parson’s rig, and I didn’t really want him for
-anything else.
-
-There was only one other of my sister’s friends I approached on the
-subject before I had recourse to my own—Parker White, a bouncing sort
-of young man who had just got into the House of Commons, and who, I
-thought, might possibly be useful. But, as I cautiously felt my way with
-him, he looked so frightened, and talked such balderdash about his
-position and filibustering and European complications (complications
-with Monaco, if you please, with an army of seventy men!) that I
-pretended it was all a joke and turned the conversation.
-
-To tell the truth, I was not much disappointed in Parker White, since I
-know very well how most of those younger men in the House are all gas
-and no performance; but, all the same, he was pretty cunning; for, to
-put it vulgarly, he lay low and waited, and when talk began to get about
-of what we had done, and the Casino Company’s shares fell immediately in
-consequence of our success, he bought them up like ripe cherries; and
-then, when it was all contradicted by a subsidized press (which made me
-wild and drove me to writing this work in self-defence), and the shares
-jumped up again, he promptly sold and made a good thing out of it.
-
-But he has never had the grace to thank me for putting the opportunity
-in his way; which is so like those men in the House who speculate on
-their information on the sly and then blush to find it fame.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- I INTERVIEW MR. BRENTIN—HIS SYMPATHY AND INTEREST—SIR ANTHONY
- HIPKINS AND THE YACHT _AMARANTH_—WE DETERMINE TO LOOK OVER IT
-
-
-I SOON began to see that, out of so conventional an atmosphere as
-Medworth Square, I was not likely to gather any great profit to my
-scheme; that, if my idea were ever to bear fruit, I must set to work
-among my own particular friends in my own way.
-
-On thinking them over, I determined to approach Mr. Julius C. Brentin
-first, an American gentleman whom I knew to be above prejudice, and to
-whom I could talk with perfect freedom and security.
-
-He is a man of about fifty-five, a Californian, of medium height (which,
-like many Americans, he always pronounces _heighth_), with black hair,
-black eyebrows, and a small black mustache. He carries cigars loose in
-every pocket, and he will drink whiskey with you with great good-humor
-till the subject of the immortality of the soul crops up, when he
-suddenly becomes angry, suspicious, and, finally, totally silent. And
-that subject he always introduces himself, though for what reason I
-never can conceive, unless it be to quarrel and part. I had met him in
-the street a day or two before, when he told me he had recently married
-a New York young lady and was staying at the “Victoria”; he begged me to
-come and call, and on going there I found him chewing a green cigar in
-the smoking-room, his hat on the bridge of his pugnacious nose, and a
-glass of Bourbon whiskey beside him.
-
-He reached me out a hand from the depths of his breeches pocket, as
-though he had just found it there and desired to make me a present of
-it, and pulled me down by his side. Then he gave me a long, black cigar
-out of his waistcoat pocket, worked his own round to the farther corner
-of his mouth, while with a solemn gesture he pointed to his trousers,
-carefully turned up over small patent-leather boots.
-
-“Mr. Blacker,” he said, “observe my pants. I am endeavoring to please
-Mrs. Brentin; I am striving to be English. You English invariably turn
-up the bottom of your pants; it is economical and it is fashionable,
-don’t yer know.” And Mr. Brentin winked at me a glittering, beady black
-eye.
-
-I hoped Mrs. Brentin was quite well, and he replied:
-
-“Mrs. Brentin has gone way off to Holborn, sir; she has organized an
-expedition with Mrs. William Chivers, ay socially prominent
-Philadelphian, in search of the scene of the labors of your Mrs. Gamp.
-From there she goes to the Marshalsea, to discover traces of Little
-Dorrit. She knows your Charles Dickens by heart, sir, and she follows
-him ayround. This is her first visit to the old country, and I humor her
-tastes, which are literary and high-toned, by staying at home and
-practising the English accent. I have studied the English accent
-theoretically, and I trace it to the predominance among your people of
-the waist muscles. We as a nation are deficient in waist muscles. So I
-stay at home and exercise them in the refined society of any stranger
-who can be indooced to talk with me. It is a labor of some difficulty,
-Mr. Blacker, which is gradually driving me to drink; for the strangers
-in this hotel are shy, and apt to regard me in the unflattering light of
-ay bunco-steerer.”
-
-Mr. Brentin sighed, drank, and worked his jaw and cigar with the
-solemnity of a cow masticating.
-
-“At other times, sir,” he drawled, “I stroll a block or two, way down
-the Strand. I compose my features and endeavor to assoom the vacant
-expression of ay hayseed or countryman. I have long desired to be
-approached by one of your confidence-trick desperadoes, but my success
-so far has been mighty small. They keep away from me, sir, as though I
-had the _grippe_. I apprehend, Mr. Blacker, that in my well-meant
-efforts to look imbecyle, I only look cunning. If they would only try me
-with the green-goods swindle, I should feel my time was not being
-altogether misspent. It is plaguy disheartening, and I might as well be
-back in Noo York for all the splurge I am making over here. And how have
-you been putting in your time, sir, since last year, when we went down
-to the Durby—I should say, the Darby—together?” he asked, turning his
-head my way.
-
-On any other day, I have no doubt, I should have given Mr. Brentin a
-spirited and somewhat lengthy sketch of my doings during the last year
-and a half; but my recent failures in Medworth Square had taught me the
-value of time, and I plunged at once into the real object of my visit.
-
-Directly, in rapid, clear-cut outline, I began to make my scheme clear,
-Mr. Brentin turned and looked at me; from the rigid lines of my speaking
-countenance he saw at once I was in earnest, and transferred his gaze to
-his pants and boots. Once only he gave me another rapid look, an ocular
-upper-cut, apparently to satisfy himself of my sincerity, when my mask
-spoke so strongly of enthusiasm and determination I felt I had
-completely reassured him, and was, in fact, gradually overhauling his
-will. As I went on, he began to breathe gustily through his nose and
-give a series of small kicks with his varnished toe, indications of
-growing ardor for the enterprise and a desire to immediately set about
-it that simply enchanted me.
-
-When I descended to details, it was my turn to watch him. The cigar he
-was chewing was a complete indicator of his frame of mind. As I spoke of
-half a dozen resolute men with revolvers, it rose to the horizontal;
-when I mentioned the steam-yacht and a bolt for the harbor, it drooped
-like a trailed stick; while, as I sketched our rapid flight to the Greek
-Archipelago and division of the spoil, it stuck up like a peacock’s
-tail, a true standard of revolt against the narrowness and timidity of
-our modern life.
-
-The American mind works so quickly I was not at all surprised when Mr.
-Brentin suddenly sat up, took the cigar out of his mouth, and hurled it
-to the other end of the smoking-room.
-
-Bravo! for I knew it signified away with prejudice, away with
-conventionality, away, above all, with fear! It was a silent, triumphant
-“_Jacta est alea, Rubicon transibimus!_”
-
-Then he turned to me.
-
-“Mr. Blacker,” he excitedly whispered, “by the particular disposition of
-Providence there is a party now lying up-stairs, ay titled gentleman
-with an enlarged liver, the fruit of some years spent in your colonial
-service, who owns and desires to part with one, at all events, of the
-instruments of this enterprise of ours.”
-
-“The yacht?”
-
-“The steam-yacht, sir. It is called the _Amaranth_, and lies at this
-moment at Ryde.”
-
-“What is the owner’s name?”
-
-“He was good enough to introdooce himself to me one afternoon last week
-in the parlor as Sir Anthony Hipkins.”
-
-“Hipkins? That doesn’t sound right.”
-
-“Sir,” replied Mr. Brentin, “I know very little of your titled
-aristocracy, but I admit it did not sound right to me. However, I talked
-it over with my friend, the clerk in the bureau, and he assured me that
-Hipkins is his real name; that he has been for some years judge on the
-Gold Coast, and, by the personal favor of your Queen Victoria, has been
-lately elevated to the dignity of knighthood, as some compensation for
-his complaint caught in the service. He had the next room to us, but the
-midnight groaning-act in which he occasionally indulged was too much for
-Mrs. Brentin, and we were forced to shift.”
-
-“Has he spoken to you about his yacht?”
-
-“He introdooced himself right here in the parlor, and offered it me for
-three thousand pounds.”
-
-“What did you say?”
-
-“I presented him to Mrs. Brentin right away, as I invariably do when I
-want an inconvenient request refused. She explained that ay steam-yacht
-was very little use to her in the journeys she is at present taking
-about this city in search of the localities of Charles Dickens.
-Whereupon Judge Hipkins, who impressed me as being brainy, immediately
-replied, ‘What about Yarmouth and little Em’ly’”
-
-“What did Mrs. Brentin say to that?”
-
-“Why, sir, Mrs. Brentin thought three thousand pounds too much to pay
-for the privilege of approaching Yarmouth by sea; more especially as she
-is a bad sailor, and commences to be sick at her stomach before leaving
-the kay-side. Now, however, Mr. Blacker,” he said, rising, “we will, if
-you please, go and find Sir Anthony Hipkins, and we will buy his
-steam-yacht.”
-
-The rapidity of the American mind somewhat alarmed me; still, I felt
-there was nothing for it but to follow Mr. Brentin. He went straight to
-the bureau, and, on inquiring for Sir Anthony, learned he was up-stairs
-ill in bed, and that his wife was with him.
-
-As we went up in the lift, Mr. Brentin winked at me. “It is in our
-favor, sir, that the judge is sick; we will be sympathetic, but we will
-not offer more than two thousand five hundred pounds.”
-
-We found No. 246, and Mr. Brentin knocked. A deep groaning voice called
-to us to come in.
-
-“The judge must be real bad if he has sent for his wife,” observed Mr.
-Brentin. “On reflection, we will try him with two thousand. Come right
-alawng in, sir, and I will present you.”
-
-I followed him into the bedroom, and there we found Sir Anthony lying,
-propped up in bed. He was a long, gaunt man, with a grizzling beard, a
-hook-nose, like a tulwar, and a quantity of rough, brown hair turning
-gray. By his side was sitting a small, dry, prim old lady, reading from
-a book, with gold pince-nez, and notwithstanding our entrance she went
-steadily on.
-
-“Stop that now, Nanny,” Sir Anthony called, fretfully, stretching his
-hand out of the bed over the page, “and let us hear what these men
-want.”
-
-“Sir Anthony and Lady Hipkins,” said Mr. Brentin, politely, with a bow
-to each, his hat in his hand, “permit me to present to you my young
-friend, Mr. Vincent Blacker. He is in want of a yacht, and though he has
-his eye on several, would be glad to learn particulars of yours before
-concluding.”
-
-Sir Anthony rolled his bony head on the pillow and groaned. Directly he
-withdrew his hand from the page the dry old lady went on with her
-reading in a curious, dull, flat voice. Mr. Brentin came to the foot of
-the bed, and, leaning his arms on the brass rail, surveyed him
-sympathetically.
-
-“Are you too sick, judge,” he asked, “to discuss business matters with
-us?”
-
-“_And in the eleventh year of Joram, the son of Ahab_—” droned her
-ladyship.
-
-“Go away, Nanny,” shouted Sir Anthony, pointing to the opposite door;
-“go into the next room, or go out and take a walk.”
-
-Mr. Brentin opened the door, and, after putting the Bible on the bed
-under Sir Anthony’s big nose, Lady Hipkins left the room quietly, as she
-was directed.
-
-“You’re Mr. Brentin, ain’t you?” asked the judge. “Beg your pardon for
-not recognizing you. What did you say your friend’s name was?”
-
-Mr. Brentin explained that I was Mr. Vincent Blacker, a gentleman of
-position and the highest integrity, an officer in Queen Victoria’s
-militia.
-
-“Oh, ah!” said the judge, sitting up in bed and scratching his legs
-ruefully. “And he wants to buy a yacht?”
-
-“He has almost concluded for the purchase of one,” Mr. Brentin replied,
-“but I have suggested he should wait—”
-
-The judge began most unexpectedly to laugh, bending his head between his
-knees and stifling his merriment with the counterpane.
-
-“The judge is better,” observed Mr. Brentin, with a wave of his hand.
-“The presence of gentlemen who sympathize with his complaint, and the
-likelihood of completing—”
-
-“It’s too damn ridiculous,” laughed the judge, “to be caught shamming
-Abraham like this, by George! Serves me right. You see, Mr. Blacker,
-after three years of the Gold Coast I was naturally anxious to see
-whether London had greatly altered in my absence, and, consequently,
-neglected to go and reside at Norwood with her ladyship. Whereupon her
-ladyship wrote, demanding the reason of my lengthy stay in the
-metropolis. What was I to do but say I was too ill to move, but that the
-minute I was well enough—” Sir Anthony went off laughing again, and I
-laughed too.
-
-“But that midnight groaning-act of yours, judge,” asked the shocked
-Brentin, “which so much disturbed and alarmed Mrs. Brentin and myself?”
-
-“Oh, that was genuine enough,” chuckled Sir Anthony; “but it was more
-the thought of having to go to Norwood and attend the concerts at the
-Crystal Palace than any actual physical pain.”
-
-Mr. Brentin’s visage clouded over, and he grew sombre and grave. With
-true American chivalry, he could not bear the idea of any one imposing
-on a woman, especially an old and plain one.
-
-“However,” said the judge, “I’m rightly punished by her ladyship’s
-descending on me and forcing me to go to bed—not to mention the Book of
-Kings, and all my smoke cut off.”
-
-“This will be ay lesson to you, judge, I trust,” observed Mr. Brentin,
-sternly.
-
-“First and second lesson, by George! And now let’s talk about the yacht.
-Your friend wants to buy a yacht?”
-
-I must say I was a good deal alarmed at Brentin’s coolness and
-precipitancy in so readily bringing me forward as purchaser of the
-_Amaranth_, and, as I listened to their conversation, quite made up my
-mind not to bind myself irrevocably to anything. Three, or even two,
-thousand pounds! My idea was doubtless a remarkable one, but I had no
-notion of backing it to that amount—at all events, with my own money.
-So, with an air of sham gravity, I listened, assuming as solid an air of
-wealth as I could on so short a notice, determined at the last moment to
-make the necessary fatal objections, which would finally effectually
-prevent my being saddled with the thing.
-
-The judge explained that the yacht had only just been left him by an
-uncle who had died very suddenly in the “Albany”; that it was in
-complete order, ready victualled and manned; that it had usually been
-sent round to the Riviera, and joined there overland by his uncle, who
-spent the winter months on board till the advent of spring enabled him
-to return to London; that there it was lying at Ryde, awaiting his
-orders, and that he had accidentally heard that Captain Evans, in
-default of instructions, was actually employing it for excursions on his
-own behalf, and taking the Ryde people for trips in the Solent and runs
-over to Bournemouth at so much a head when the weather was favorable;
-which would all have to be accounted for, added the judge, of course. It
-was a large yacht, of about four hundred tons, and, rather than be
-bothered with it, the judge would let it go for three thousand pounds.
-
-“Why don’t you go down and see it,” he asked, “before you decide? And,
-if I were you, I wouldn’t let Evans know you are coming; if it’s a fine
-day, you are sure to catch him at some of his little games, and that’ll
-give you a hold over him.”
-
-“Three thousand pounds is ay large sum of money, judge,” objected Mr.
-Brentin.
-
-“Not bad; but then it’s a large yacht. Now look here, don’t you haggle
-with me,” he went on, irritably, “because I don’t like it. You can
-either take it or leave it. I won’t let it go for a penny less. Rather
-than that, I’ll go and live on board and spend my time crossing between
-Portsmouth and the island. I should be safe from her ladyship, at any
-rate, for even coming up in the lift upsets her.”
-
-We shook his hand and left him composing himself to receive Lady Hipkins
-again. She was walking up and down the corridor as we came out, and Mr.
-Brentin went up to her and bowed.
-
-“The judge is real bad, ma’am,” he said, with great gravity, “and should
-not be left. He has been explaining to us what a comfort you and your
-reading are to him, and how much he looks forward to being taken down to
-Norwood and nursed back to his former robust health at your hands. If I
-may venture to advise, you should procure a hotel conveyance as soon as
-possible and drive him way down home by easy stages. The air in this
-city, ma’am, is not good for ay man of the judge’s temperament and
-physique.”
-
-“You have a kind face,” her ladyship answered, in her strange, flat
-voice, “and mean kindly, I am sure. But I am extremely deaf, and have
-not heard one word you have said. Perhaps you would kindly write it down
-for me?” she added, handing him a little book.
-
-“It’s of no consequence,” bawled Mr. Brentin through his hands.
-“Good-afternoon!”
-
-“Why doesn’t the old shakes carry a trumpet” he said, angrily, as we
-went down-stairs. “What’s the matter with a trumpet?”
-
-In the hall, before leaving him, I hastened to explain I had no thought
-of expending three thousand pounds in the purchase of Sir Anthony’s or
-any yacht whatsoever; that my contribution to the expedition would be
-the idea, and so many of the resolute men as I could lay hands on among
-my friends.
-
-“That will be all right, Mr. Blacker,” Brentin loftily replied; “I will
-see after the yacht portion of the affair. It can be made good to me, if
-I run short, out of the boodle, and, if it all fails, I have no doubt I
-shall have my money value in excitement. In the meantime, sir, let us
-waltz in and secure the yacht, to begin with. If you will be free in the
-morning, we will descend upon Ryde and Captain Evans. If we find him
-going to sea, so much the better; we shall have the opportunity of
-testing the sailing capacities of the _Amaranth_. Good-day to you, sir.
-I have to thank you for infusing my exhossted veins with a breath of the
-true spirit of the forty-niners, who made the State of California what
-she is. The holding up of ay Sacramento bank will be nothing to this,
-sir, if we don’t spile—that is, spoil—it.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- WE GO TO RYDE—THE _AMARANTH_—ACCIDENTAL MEETING WITH ARTHUR
- MASTERS AND HIS LADY FRIEND—I ENROLL HIM AMONG US PROVISIONALLY
- —WE DECIDE TO PURCHASE THE YACHT
-
-
-I DON’T know that it would be altogether necessary to the course of the
-narrative of this work to say much about our visit to Ryde and the
-_Amaranth_ were it not that, while there, we accidentally encountered
-Arthur Masters, an old friend and school-fellow of mine. He was staying
-at Seaview, and, being in a mazed condition of lovelornness (for nothing
-short of it would have induced him to neglect the harriers of which he
-is master in Hertfordshire), had come over for the day with the young
-lady, and was spending it there mainly on the pier, being uncommonly
-warm and fine for November.
-
-Mr. Brentin and I had just arrived, and were keeping our weather-eye
-open for the _Amaranth_, when we came on Arthur and his young lady
-sitting on the pier in the sun. She was introduced to us as Miss Rybot,
-and wore a straw-hat and a shirt, just as though it were summer.
-
-We told them we had come down about a yacht, and, if we could only find
-her, were thinking of making a small trial-trip across the Solent.
-
-As we were talking and persuading them to accompany us, up comes a
-sailor in a blue jersey, with _Amaranth_ across it in red, and hands us
-a printed bill.
-
- “_The_ Amaranth, _fast steam-yacht (Captain Evans, Commander),
- will sail daily from Hyde pier-head (weather permitting) for a
- two hours’ trip in the Solent. Fares: Saloon, half a crown; fore
- cabin, one shilling_.”
-
-“Doing much business?” asked Mr. Brentin carelessly, cocking his eye on
-the man.
-
-“Pretty fair, mister,” the sailor replied, “when the weather’s like
-this. There’s a good few aboard already.”
-
-“Is there?” Mr. Brentin innocently remarked. “All right. Give Captain
-Evans Sir Anthony Hipkins’s compliments and say we will come aboard
-right away.”
-
-“Sir Anthony! Lord love you!” ejaculated the sailor, and was off pretty
-fast down to the pier-head.
-
-“We will give the captain a few minutes to clear out his Ryde friends,”
-observed Mr. Brentin with a wink, “and then we will pro-ceed.”
-
-And, sure enough, as we got leisurely down to the pier-head there we
-found a boat just landing from the _Amaranth_, half a dozen
-excursionists in her with hand-bags and bottles, talking fast among
-themselves and giving frightened glances back at the yacht lying in the
-tideway two or three hundred yards off.
-
-“Anything wrong on board, my friend?” drawled Mr. Brentin to a large,
-puce-faced man with a red comforter loosely knotted round his throat, as
-he clambered up the pier steps.
-
-“Anythin’ wrong?” echoed the terrified man. “Captain says rust ’as
-suddenly got into the b’ilers and ’e’s afraid they’ll bust. That’s
-all!—Mother, where’s Emma?”
-
-“We shall have the ship to ourselves,” remarked Mr. Brentin. “Music
-provided, too. Sakes alive!”
-
-The music was a harp, a cornet, and a stout woman with a large accordion
-slung on her back. The cornettist, a battered-looking young man with one
-eye, carried a shell for collecting the money, and a camp-stool.
-
-“Oh, don’t go!” drawled Mr. Brentin; “we have a passion for music on the
-waters.”
-
-“‘Ave you?” cried the sarcastic cornettist. “Well, I ’ope you’ll like
-gittin’ blown up, too. Full steam a’ead, mates! Now then, missis, out of
-the way!”
-
-Off they all trooped together as fast as they could down the length of
-the pier, giving occasional frightened glances back at the yacht, which
-began to blow us a sycophantish salute with her whistle.
-
-“The only person who will get blown up to-day,” observed Mr. Brentin as
-he took his seat in the boat, “will be Captain Evans.”
-
-All this time Miss Rybot had scarcely said a word. She was rather a
-haughty, not to say disagreeable-looking, young lady; tall, slightly
-freckled, with a high nose and a quantity of beautiful auburn hair. She
-appeared to take the situation with the utmost indifference, and not in
-the least to care whether she stayed on shore or went to sea and never
-came back. Altogether the sort of young lady who might lead an adorer
-rather a dance.
-
-“Get under way at once, if you please, Captain Evans,” said Mr. Brentin,
-sternly, as we came on board and found the captain waiting for us,
-exceedingly alarmed, his cap in his hand.
-
-“Aye, aye, sir!” bleated the captain. “Where to?”
-
-“Anywhere where we can give the yacht’s speed a fair trial. What’s the
-matter with our going round the island?”
-
-“There’s nothing the matter with it, sir, that I am aware of,” answered
-the startled Evans.
-
-“Then make it so! And then come and give me a few moments’ conversation
-in the saloon. For the use of which,” Mr. Brentin gravely added, “I do
-not propose to pay half a dollar.”
-
-“Aye, aye, sir!” And off we bustled towards Spithead.
-
-“Where will you sit, Miss Rybot?” Masters asked, humbly.
-
-“Anywhere out of the wind,” was the indifferent answer; “and be good
-enough, please, to leave me to myself for a little. I wish to collect my
-thoughts, and you have, no doubt, a good deal to talk over with your
-friend.”
-
-The unfortunate Masters found her a sheltered seat (which she soon left
-and selected another), wrapped her legs in a rug (which she promptly
-threw off), and then came and sat himself down by me.
-
-“She’s an orphan,” he whispered, biting his nails, “and has to teach. I
-met her at Seaview. She has forty pounds a year of her own, and has one
-little nasty pupil, whom she loathes. She’s a strict Roman Catholic, and
-talks of entering a convent, but she’s a good deal in debt, and wants to
-pay off her debts first. She talks of going to Monte Carlo and winning
-enough at the tables to pay her debts, and then becoming a Poor Clare.”
-
-“A Poor Clare?”
-
-“They’re a strictly enclosed order,” he groaned; “they keep a perpetual
-fast, have no beds, and go barefooted. They spend all their time in
-prayer and meditation, and live on alms.”
-
-“Then they don’t marry, I suppose?”
-
-“Don’t I tell you they’re strictly enclosed?”
-
-“How long have you known her?”
-
-“About a month. I met her at a friend’s house at Seaview.”
-
-“Have you said anything to her yet?”
-
-“Nothing very definite. I was going to to-day. But I don’t believe it
-will be any use,” he sighed; “she seems bent on the convent.”
-
-“Do you think she suspects your attachment?”
-
-“Oh, she must by this time. I’ve given up several days’ golf for her.
-But she’s so confoundedly independent and thinks so badly of men. She
-fancies they’re all after her because she’s poor.”
-
-“Extraordinary young person!”
-
-“Well, she says that if a man knows a girl’s poor he always believes
-she’s only too ready to marry him, just to escape from teaching and
-secure a comfortable home. That’s the sort of girl she is; she swears
-she won’t be purchased. What am I to do? What do you advise?”
-
-I gave him plenty of sound advice, but could see he wasn’t attending to
-me. At last he roused himself to ask about my affairs. He had heard the
-Mabel Harker entanglement was over, and naturally supposed there was
-some one else. So off I went about Lucy and “The French Horn,”
-describing her minutely, and how unhappy I was, and how I was going down
-there at Christmas to make it all up, and that in the meantime—
-
-“Then you would speak to her to-day and get some definite answer out of
-her?” he asked, biting his nails.
-
-“How can I to-day, when she’s miles away in the Ladbroke Grove Road?”
-
-Masters stared, and I saw, of course, he hadn’t been attending and was
-only thinking of himself.
-
-With his mind in so confused and despondent a condition, I judged the
-opportunity excellent to try and get him to join us; so, after a few
-cautious preliminaries, I drew closer and let him into the whole secret
-of our visit to Ryde and trial of the yacht, giving him to understand
-that Mr. Brentin was already one of the heads of the enterprise, and
-that, if I couldn’t get the necessary half-dozen resolute Englishmen, he
-would easily fill their places with the same number of ditto Americans,
-from the hotels in Northumberland Avenue; which would cause me some
-national shame, I said, and give me ground for fearing the ancient
-spirit of the country was really gone and dribbled off into mere
-stock-jobbing, as so many people assert—Drake and the Gilberts and
-Raleigh having shuffled into Capel Court, touting on curb-stones like
-Hamburg peddlers or ready-money pencillers, instead of taking the broad
-and daring road of nerve and valor.
-
-Further, I seductively pointed out there would be no sort of reason why
-Miss Rybot shouldn’t be of the party and try legitimately to win enough
-at the tables to pay her debts, if her heart was set on it; which would
-free her from all obligation towards him and bring about their marriage
-in the most natural way; and that if a chaperon were needed, I would
-engage to supply one, whether the young lady went to Monte Carlo by land
-or by sea.
-
-As I had already experienced, different men take an announcement of this
-high order in different ways—some are shocked, some incredulous; some
-see all the difficulties at once, some never see any. As for Arthur
-Masters, he was in such a state of depression that I believe if I had
-said, “Arthur, we are going North to root up the Pole; will you make
-one?” he’d have answered, “Delighted!” and been off to Beale & Inman’s
-at once to order the necessary outfit.
-
-At all events, what he did say was, that if Miss Rybot could be induced
-to come, he would certainly come too, and do his best, charging himself
-with the duty of feeling his way with her, and promising to let me know
-the result as soon as possible. He only stipulated he should not be away
-longer than a fortnight in January, because of his harriers, which all
-this time were being rather inefficiently hunted by his younger brother
-and the dog boy.
-
-We got back safely to Ryde, thoroughly satisfied with our outing and the
-behavior of the _Amaranth_, and caught the six-o’clock train back to
-Victoria.
-
-Mr. Brentin had unfortunately taken a strong dislike to Miss Rybot, and
-imitated her cold, haughty “Really! you don’t say so!” and other
-stand-offish little speeches, most of the way up. The imitation was not
-in the least like, of course, but served to show me the scornful bent of
-his mind towards her. When I told him I had secured Masters on the
-condition she came too, he grew quite angry, and declared that whatever
-route she took he should most certainly take the other, rather than be
-frozen in her society. He added, as a further ground of dislike, she was
-“pop-eyed”—a somewhat unjust description of her slightly prominent,
-large, cold, gray optics.
-
-As for Captain Evans and his little game of using the yacht for
-excursions on his own account, the captain had given the, to me, rather
-lame explanation that yachts left idle came to no good, and should, in
-short, be taken out for exercise just like horses. Questioned why he
-didn’t go out without company, he averred he must have ballast or the
-yacht would throb her sides out, and that he thought he might as well
-make the ballast pay. Also that he had kept a most careful record of
-receipts, and was prepared to account for every farthing to the rightful
-owners, whoever they should turn out to be.
-
-In short, as is so often the case, Captain Evans had managed to prove
-quite conclusively that Mr. Brentin was entirely in the wrong in
-suspecting his proceedings, and that he was a much injured and wholly
-innocent British sailor.
-
-“That, sir,” said Mr. Brentin, chewing his cigar as we rattled along in
-the train, “has happened to me more than once with your lower orders. I
-go into my tailor’s with my noo coat bulging at the back, bursting with
-ay sense of injury at the misfit considering the price I have paid. And
-that tailor keeps cool while I stamp around; he surveys me with ay
-pitying smile, he calls up his assistants to admire the fit, and he
-proves to me con-clusively that the best part of that coat is precisely
-the bulge in the back, and that I shall injure his reputation and ruin
-the coat if I have it touched. I enter that store, sir, like ay raging
-lion, and I leave it ay teething lamb, my mouth overflowing with
-apologies, which the damn tailor will scarcely accept. And I know he
-thinks, ‘What infernal fools these Yankees are!’ and is laafing at me in
-his sleeve as the bulge and I disappear in the crowd of his other
-misfits, and are lost in the night of his paid accounts.”
-
-That same evening the purchase of the yacht was concluded by Mr.
-Brentin, as he wrote me in the morning; directing me, further, to go
-right ahead and get the rest of my desperadoes together for a dash on
-the tables in January. He added in a postscript that, for his part, he
-was going into the city early next morning to buy three fair-sized
-cannon, capable of throwing three fair-sized shells; for, in case
-anything went wrong and we were captured, it would be just as well to
-leave orders with Captain Evans to shell the Casino, and so continue
-till we were released and replaced on board the _Amaranth_, with a
-guarantee for our expenses, and an undertaking for no further
-molestation.
-
-Bold as I am, owing in some measure to my militia training, the rapidity
-of the American mind was again causing me some considerable qualms.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- MY SISTER’S SUSPICIONS—HEROES OF _THE ARGO_—MY SISTER DETERMINES
- TO COME WITH US AS CHAPERON TO MISS RYBOT
-
-
-FROM now right on to Christmas I lived in a constant hurry and ferment
-of excitement; for not only was I full of every sort of preparation for
-our adventure, but every day brought me nearer “The French Horn” and my
-seeing dear Lucy once more. By the second week in December I had at last
-got our party of six together; to which number, for the present, at any
-rate, by Mr. Brentin’s advice, it was determined to limit it. If it were
-to be done at all, he said, six could easily do it, and by adding more
-we were only increasing the danger of the affair leaking out and the
-people at the tables being forewarned and forearmed; neither of which,
-though more particularly the latter, did we at all desire.
-
-Directly the party was complete, I informed Mr. Brentin, and by his
-directions gave them all a rendezvous at “The French Horn” for
-Christmas. He wished to see us all together he said, and take our
-measure; not that he doubted I had chosen the right sort, but rather
-that he might consider what post should be assigned to each—who should
-lead the van and who should guard the rear, and who, if necessary,
-should form the reserve and direct the shell-throwing on the Casino in
-case of our capture.
-
-Meantime I had been so busy running over the country, interviewing and
-persuading, and by many being point-blank refused, that I had quite
-neglected my sister, Mrs Rivers, and Medworth Square; and whether it was
-she suspected something from my continued absence, or something had
-leaked out through Parker White, I never could quite discover; but, at
-any rate, she one day sent for me to come to tea, and attacked me at
-once to know what I was doing and why I never came to the house.
-
-From very early days my sister Muriel has been my confidante in
-everything. My father I scarcely remember, beyond the fact that he
-always wore a white waistcoat and smelt of sherry when he kissed me, and
-my dear mother died in Jubilee year—a very sad year, notwithstanding
-the universal illuminations and rejoicings, for me; so to Muriel I have
-always carried all my troubles and griefs, and no better sister for that
-sort of work could any man wish for.
-
-Particularly has she always been the sympathetic recipient of my
-love-affairs, with the single exception of my affair with Lucy; for
-though Muriel isn’t in the least a snob, yet I don’t suppose she would
-have been best pleased to learn of her only brother’s attachment to an
-innkeeper’s daughter, of however old a family. So all she knew was that
-the Mabel Harker business was at an end, and was naturally wondering how
-my vagrant heart was being employed meantime; questions on which
-subject, however, I had always managed to shirk.
-
-Directly we were alone in the Medworth Square morning-room, she opened
-fire on me.
-
-“Frank has been asking what has become of you lately, Vincent,” she
-said—“what have you been doing with yourself?”
-
-“I’ve been seeing a good deal of some Americans at the ‘Victoria,’ and a
-good deal in and out of town.”
-
-“Nothing else?”
-
-“Nothing of any importance. How’s Mollie?”
-
-“You can go and see Mollie afterwards. Now, look here, Vincent, you’re
-up to something, and I mean to know what it is. I can’t have my only
-brother drifting into a scrape, without doing my best to keep him out of
-it. You’d better make a clean breast. I shall be sure to find out.”
-
-I’d half a mind to tell her a downright fib and stop her importunities
-that way; but I’d the instinct she knew something of the fact, and was
-well aware that, if she weren’t told all, would set her prig of a
-husband to work; and then our enterprise would as likely as not be
-nipped in the bud by being made public property.
-
-So, on the whole, I judged it best to tell her exactly what we were
-doing and were going to do, taking care only to bind her over to the
-completest secrecy, which, once she had given her word, I knew she would
-die sooner than break.
-
-She was half amused, half frightened, and at first wholly incredulous.
-
-“But who on earth have you found to join you in such a cracked scheme?”
-she asked. “I didn’t know you’d so many desperate lunatics among your
-acquaintances.”
-
-“Well, there’s Arthur Masters and Bob Hines, to begin with; you know
-them.”
-
-“I don’t think I know Mr. Hines, do I? Who is he?”
-
-“Oh, he was at Marlborough with me, and now keeps a boys’ school at
-Folkestone.”
-
-“A nice instructor of youth, to go on an expedition of this kind,”
-laughed my sister.
-
-“That’s exactly what he’s afraid of; he says if he’s caught, it’ll be
-the end of his business and he’ll have to break stones.”
-
-“Then why does he go?”
-
-“Well, you see, he’s very much in want of a gymnasium for his boys, and
-I’ve promised to build him one out of the swag, if he’ll join us.”
-
-“Tempted and fallen!” said my sister. “Really, Vincent, you’re a
-Mephistopheles. And who else?”
-
-“Harold Forsyth, of the Devon Borderers.”
-
-“Is that the little man who always looks as if he was bursting out of
-his clothes with overeating?”
-
-“I dare say.”
-
-“But I thought he was engaged to be married. What’s the young lady
-about, to let him go?”
-
-“Well, the fact is,” said I, “the young lady turns out to be a wrong un,
-and is now chasing him about with a writ for breach of promise in her
-glove, like a cab-fare.”
-
-“So he’s off to escape that?” said my sister. “You’re a nice lot. Any
-one else?”
-
-“Teddy Parsons, in my militia.”
-
-“He’s a poor creature,” my sister observed. “I shouldn’t take him; why,
-all he can do is play the banjo and walk about Southport in breeches and
-gaiters!”
-
-“Yes, but he’s an old friend, and I want to do him a good turn.”
-
-“You’ve odd notions of doing people a good turn,” Muriel laughed.
-
-“The fact is,” I said, “he’s rather in a hole about a bill of his that’s
-coming due. He’s gone shares with one of our fellows in the regiment in
-a steeple-chaser and given him a bill to meet the expenses of training
-and the purchase; and as the bill’s coming due and he’s mortally afraid
-of his father—”
-
-“You undertake to meet the bill, on the condition he joins you. I see.
-And has that been the best you can do? Who’s the sixth?”
-
-“Mr. Brentin, who’s bought the yacht; the American at the ‘Victoria.’”
-
-“Well, all I can say is,” said my sister, after a pause, “you’re rather
-a lame crew. Why, Teddy Parsons alone is enough to ruin anything!”
-
-“Yes, I know,” I groaned, “but what is one to do? I’ve been all over the
-country seeing men, but they’re all much too frightened. We’re an
-utterly scratch lot, I know, but Brentin and I must do the best we can
-with the material and trust to luck.”
-
-“That you most certainly will have to do,” said my sister, with
-conviction.
-
-“Why can’t you come with us,” I urged, “and be the mascot of the party?
-We must have some one of the kind, if only to chaperon Miss Rybot.”
-
-“Dear me, who’s Miss Rybot?”
-
-“Arthur Masters’s young woman, without whom he won’t stir.”
-
-Now my sister Muriel is like a good many other highly respectable
-Englishwomen: she is a most faithful wife and devoted mother, but she
-doesn’t care in any particular degree about her husband, and is only too
-glad to welcome anything in the way of honest excitement, if only to
-break the monotony of home life. And here was excitement for her,
-indeed, and, properly regarded, of the most irreproachably honest
-description.
-
-It flattered, too, her love of adventure, for which she had never had
-much outlet in Medworth Square. Where we Blackers get our love of
-adventure from, by-the-way, I don’t quite know, unless it be from my
-mother’s father, who fought at Waterloo, and died a very old gentleman,
-a Knight of Windsor; but we certainly both of us have it very strongly,
-as all good English people should.
-
-To cut a long story short, for I must really be getting on, my sister
-finally agreed to come, if only as chaperon to Miss Rybot. Like the rest
-of us, she had never been to Monte Carlo, having been hitherto forbidden
-by her husband; but now she said she would insist, and allege as a
-reason the necessity of her presence for keeping her only brother from
-ruining himself at the tables.
-
-So I was delighted to hear of her plucky resolve, particularly as it at
-once got rid of the difficulty of Miss Rybot’s chaperon—since Brentin
-had made up his mind not to take his wife, but send her down to
-Rochester while he was away, and keep her fully employed there, in
-Charles Dickens’s country.
-
-I kissed my sister, promising to come back to dinner, and meantime went
-up in the nursery, where I found my niece Mollie seated by the fire,
-wrapped in a grimy little shawl, reading Grimm’s _Fairy Tales_.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- MR. BRENTIN’S INDISCRETION—LUCY AND I MAKE IT UP—BAILEY THOMPSON
- APPEARS IN CHURCH—ON CHRISTMAS DAY WE HOLD A COUNCIL OF WAR
-
-
-NOW it was the very day we went down to “The French Horn” together that
-Mr. Brentin confessed to me how, in spite of our agreement as to keeping
-the affair a profound secret, he had actually been so rash as to confide
-our whole plan to a stranger—a stranger casually encountered, above all
-places, in the smoking-room of the “Victoria”!
-
-How incomprehensible, how weak and wavering is man! Here was Julius C.
-Brentin, as shrewd an American as can be met with in Low’s Exchange,
-deliberately pouring into a strange ear a secret he had hitherto rigidly
-guarded even from his young and attractive wife.
-
-Of course he had his excuses and defence; what man has not, when he does
-wrong? But whatever the excuse, there still remained the unpleasant fact
-that there was positively a man walking about (and from his description
-one evidently not quite a gentleman) who knew all about our arrangements
-and could at any moment communicate them to the authorities at Monte
-Carlo.
-
-When I asked him, somewhat sharply, how ever he had come to commit so
-gross a blunder, he had really no explanation to give. He seemed to
-think he had sufficiently safeguarded himself by exchanging cards with
-the man, than which I could not conceive anything more childish—
-
- _MR. BAILEY THOMPSON_
-
-without an address or a club on it! What possible guarantee was there in
-that? Brentin himself couldn’t quite say; only he seemed to fancy the
-possession of his card gave him some sort of hold on the owner, and that
-so long as he had it in his keeping we were safe against treachery.
-
-How totally wrong he was, and how nearly his absurd confidence came to
-absolutely ruining us all, will clearly appear as this work goes on and
-readers are taken to Monte Carlo.
-
-At last, as I continued to reproach him, he took refuge in saying,
-“Well, it’s done, and there’s an end to it; give over talking through
-your hat!” A vulgar Americanism which much offended me, and caused us to
-drive up to “The French Horn” in somewhat sulky silence.
-
-It was the 23d of December, and we found Mr. Thatcher ready for us. I at
-once left him to show Brentin over the house, the great hall decorated
-with holly and cotton-wool mottoes, and to his room, while I went in
-immediate search of Lucy.
-
-Over that tender meeting I draw the sacred veil of reticence. The dear
-girl was soon in my arms, soft and palpitating, full of forgiveness and
-love. We spent the afternoon together in a long walk across the links
-and down to the coast-guards’ cottages, where we had tea; returning only
-in time for dinner, through the dark and starry evening of that
-singularly mild December.
-
-The result of our walk was that we made up our minds to be married
-shortly before Easter—so soon, in fact, as I could get back from abroad
-and settle my affairs. About Monte Carlo, I told her nothing further
-than that my sister was not well, and I had undertaken to escort her
-there, and see after her for a time—a fib, which, knowing Lucy’s
-apprehensive nature, I judged to be necessary, and for which I trust one
-day to be forgiven.
-
-Mr. Brentin and I dined together, partly in silence, partly snapping at
-each other. On Christmas Eve our party was complete, with the exception
-of Harold Forsyth, who came over next morning from Colchester. On
-Christmas Day, “What’s the matter with our all going to Church?” said
-Mr. Brentin.
-
-“Nothing particularly the matter,” Bob Hines replied, rather gruffly,
-“except that some of us are probably unaccustomed to it.”
-
-However, Brentin insisted, and to Church, accordingly, we all went, as
-meek as bleating lambs.
-
-Now in the Wharton Park pew was sitting Mr. Crage. The pew is so
-sheltered with its high partition and curtain-rods, I didn’t see him
-till he stood up; nor did I know there was any one else there till the
-parson glared down straight into the pew from the clerk’s ancient seat
-under the pulpit, whence he read the lessons, and said he really must
-beg chance members of the congregation to observe the proper reverential
-attitude, and not be continually seated.
-
-Whereupon a deep voice replied, amid considerable sensation, from the
-bowels of the pew, “Sir, you are in error. I always rise as the rubric
-directs, but having no advantage of height—” the rest of the speech
-being lost in the irreverent titters of our party.
-
-Brentin, who was next the pew, looked over the partition and added to
-the sensation by audibly observing, “Sakes alive! It’s friend Bailey
-Thompson.”
-
-When the service was over and we all got outside, he whispered, “Wait a
-minute, Blacker; send the others on, and I’ll present you to my friend.”
-So the others went on back to “The French Horn,” while I remained behind
-with some apprehension and curiosity to take this Mr. Bailey Thompson’s
-measure. He came out alone, Mr. Crage remaining to have a few words with
-the parson (with whom he was continually squabbling), and Brentin and
-Bailey Thompson greeted each other with great warmth.
-
-He turned out to be a short, dark, determined-looking little man, with a
-square chin and old-fashioned, black, mutton-chop whiskers. No, he was
-clearly not quite a gentleman, in the sense that he had evidently never
-been at a public school.
-
-“This,” said Mr. Brentin as he presented me, “is the originator of the
-little scheme I was telling you of—Mr. Vincent Blacker.”
-
-“Oh, indeed!” Mr. Bailey Thompson replied, looking me full in the face
-with his penetrating black eyes, and politely lifting his small, tall
-hat. “Oh, indeed! so you really meant it?”
-
-“Meant it?” echoed Brentin. “Why, the band of brothers is here; they
-were in the pew next you. Mr. Bailey Thompson, we are all here together
-for the making of our final arrangements, and in two weeks we start.”
-
-“Oh, indeed!” he smiled; “it’s a bold piece of work.”
-
-“Sir, it is colossal, but it will succeed!”
-
-“Let us hope so. I am sure I wish you every success.”
-
-“Mr. Bailey Thompson,” said Brentin, evidently nettled at the way the
-little man continued incredulously to smile, “if you care to join us
-some time during the afternoon we shall be glad to lay details of our
-plan before you. They will not only prove our _bona-fides_, but show how
-complete and fully thought out all our preparations are.”
-
-“If I can leave my friend Crage towards four o’clock, I will,” Mr.
-Thompson replied. “I know Monte Carlo as well as most men, and may be
-able to give you some useful hints.”
-
-“We shall be glad to see you, for none of us have ever been there. But
-not a word to your friend!”
-
-“Not a word to a soul!” smiled the imperturbable little man; and he left
-us to join the abandoned Crage, who was still inside the sacred edifice
-snarling at the parson.
-
-It was quite useless saying anything further to Brentin. I merely
-contented myself with pointing out that if anything could make me
-suspect Mr. Bailey Thompson, it was his being the guest of Mr. Crage.
-
-“Pawsibly!” drawled Mr. Brentin. “I don’t pretend the man is pure-bred,
-nor exactly fit at this moment to take his seat at Queen Victoria’s
-table; but that he’s stanch, with that square chin, I will stake my
-bottom dollar. And seeing how well he knows the locality, we shall learn
-something from him, sir, which, you may depend upon, will be highly
-useful.”
-
-The attitude of the band of brothers so far had been rather of the
-negative order. Whether their enthusiasm was cooling, as they had been
-employing their spare time in pitifully surveying the difficulties and
-danger of the scheme, instead of the glory and the profit, I know not;
-but, obviously, neither on Christmas Eve nor Christmas morning were they
-any longer in the hopeful condition in which they were when I first
-approached and secured them.
-
-That they had been talking the matter over among themselves was clear,
-for no sooner was the Christmas fare disposed of in the great hall than
-they began to open fire. Their first shot was discharged when Mr.
-Thatcher brought us in a bowl of punch, about three o’clock, and Brentin
-proceeded to charge their glasses, and desire them to drink to the
-affair and our successful return therefrom.
-
-They drank the toast so half-heartedly, much as Jacobites when called on
-to pledge King George, that Brentin lost his temper.
-
-“Gentlemen!” he cried, thumping the table, “if you cannot drink to our
-success with more _momentum_ than that, you will never do for
-adventurers; you may as well stay right here and till the soil. And
-that’s all there is to it!”
-
-“What’s the matter with eating fat bacon under a hedge?” growled Bob
-Hines. He had been much nettled at the way Brentin had taken us all in
-charge, and more particularly at his being ordered off to church. Hence
-his not altogether apposite interruption.
-
-Brentin fixed him with his glittering, beady eyes. “Mr. Hines,” he said,
-“if you are the spokesman of the malecontents, I am perfectly ready to
-hear what you have to object.”
-
-“You are very good,” Hines replied, stiffly, “but I imagined the scheme
-was Blacker’s, and not yours at all.”
-
-“The scheme is the scheme,” said Brentin, impatiently. “Neither one
-man’s nor another’s. Either you go in with us or you do not; now, then,
-take your choice, right here and now. You know all about it, what we are
-going to do and how we are going to do it. There are no flies on the
-scheme, any more than there are on us. We don’t care ay ginger-snap
-whether you withdraw or not; but at least we have the right to know
-which course you intend to pursue.”
-
-“The difficulty appears to me,” Forsyth struck in, in conciliatory
-tones, “that none of us have ever been to the place, so that we can’t
-really tell whether the thing is possible or not.”
-
-“Exactly!” murmured Teddy Parsons.
-
-Brentin gave a gesture of vexation. “Monte Carlo has, of course, been
-thoroughly surveyed before this determination of ours has been arrived
-at—from a distance, ay considerable distance, I admit. Still, it has
-been surveyed, though, naturally, through other parties’ eyes. Every
-authority we have consulted agrees that the thing is perfectly feasible;
-every one, without exception, wonders why it has never been done before;
-every one admits it is a plague-spot which should be cauterized. Shall
-we do it? Yes or no? There is the whole thing in ay nutshell.”
-
-Teddy Parsons observed, “There is one thing I should like to know, and
-that is—er—will there be any bloodshed?”
-
-“Not unless they shed it,” was Brentin’s somewhat grim reply.
-
-Teddy shuddered and went on, “But I understand we are actually to be
-armed with revolvers.”
-
-“That is so,” said Brentin, “but they will not be loaded, or with blank
-cartridge at the most. Experience tells us that gentlemen are just as
-badly frightened by an unloaded as by a loaded gun.”
-
-Then Arthur Masters struck in, “I suppose there will be likely to be a
-good deal of hustling and possibly violence before we can count on
-getting clear away?”
-
-“I don’t apprehend,” said Brentin, “there will be much of either;
-though, of course, we can’t expect the affair will pass off quite so
-quietly as an ordinary social lunch-party. We may, for instance, have to
-knock a few people down. Surely English gentlemen are not afraid of
-having to do that?”
-
-“It is not a question of fear,” Masters haughtily replied. “I’m not
-thinking of that.”
-
-“Hear! Hear!” cried that snipe Parsons.
-
-“I am thinking of the ladies of our party.”
-
-“There’s a very pretty girl here,” Parsons ventured. “I wish she could
-be persuaded—”
-
-Forsyth nudged him, while I cried “Order!” savagely.
-
-“There will be ladies in our party,” Masters went on. “It would be a
-terrible thing if they were to be frightened or in any way injured.”
-
-“I yield to no man,” declaimed Brentin, “in my chivalrous respect for
-the sex. But there are certain places and times when the presence of
-ladies is highly undesirable. The Casino rooms at Monte Carlo, when we
-are about to raid them, is one. That’s the reason which has determined
-me to leave Mrs. Brentin behind, in complete ignorance of what we are
-about to do. I do not presume to dictate to other gentlemen what their
-course of action should be, but I must say our chances of success will
-be enormously magnified if no ladies are permitted to be of the party.”
-
-“Hear! Hear!” murmured Hines, who from a certain gruffness of manner is
-no particular favorite with the sex.
-
-“Perhaps it would be enough,” urged Masters, “if, on the actual day of
-our attempt, the ladies of our party undertook not to go into the
-rooms?”
-
-“Perhaps it would,” Brentin replied, “but for myself I should prefer
-they remained altogether in England, offering up a series of succinct
-and heartfelt prayers for our safe return.”
-
-Bob Hines gave a snort of laughter, whereupon Brentin fixed him
-inquiringly.
-
-“Englishwomen have prayed for the safe return of heroes before now, Mr.
-Hines.”
-
-“I am aware of it.”
-
-“Then why gurgle at the back of your throat?”
-
-“I have a certain irrepressible sense of humor.”
-
-“That is remarkable for an Englishman!”
-
-Whether Mr. Brentin were deliberately bent on rubbing us all up the
-wrong way, I don’t know, but he was most certainly doing it, so I
-thought it judicious to interpose. It was just at that moment Mr. Bailey
-Thompson stepped into the room.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- MR. BAILEY THOMPSON GIVES US HIS INGENIOUS ADVICE—WE ARE FOOLS
- ENOUGH TO TRUST HIM—MISPLACED CONFIDENCE
-
-
-“THE very man!” cried Brentin. “Mr. Bailey Thompson, let me present you
-to my friends. You are just in time to give them assurance of the
-feasibility of the great scheme you and I have already had some
-discussion over.”
-
-Now Bailey Thompson’s name had been cursorily mentioned during dinner as
-that of a gentleman who might look in in the course of the afternoon,
-and, if he came, would be able to give us some useful hints; but, beyond
-that, Brentin had kept him back as a final card, having already some
-notion of the wavering going on, and desiring to use him to clinch the
-business one way or the other.
-
-Mr. Thompson bowed and smiled, and Brentin went on.
-
-“There is some dissatisfaction in the camp, sir; there is some doubt and
-there is fear. Advice is badly needed. I look to you to give it us.”
-
-“I shall be very glad to be of any use.”
-
-“Then let me present you, Mr. Thompson. This powerful young man with the
-leonine head and cherry-wood pipe is Mr. Hines; next him, with the
-slight frame, tawny mustache, and Richmond Gem cigarette, is Mr.
-Parsons; opposite, with the clean, clear, and agreeable countenance and
-the cigar, is Mr. Forsyth; next him, with the sloping brow and
-thoughtful back to his head, is Mr. Masters, who doesn’t smoke. Vincent
-Blacker you know. Gentlemen, Mr. Bailey Thompson. There is your glass,
-sir; drink, and when you feel sufficiently stimulated and communicative,
-speak!”
-
-Mr. Thompson darted his penetrating eyes over the company, smiled again,
-and took his glass of tepid punch.
-
-“So you really mean it,” he said, sitting between us.
-
-Mr. Brentin groaned. “Don’t let us hear that from you again, sir,” he
-said; “it is likely to breed bad blood. Take it from me, we really mean
-it, and only need advice how it should best be done. Mr. Bailey
-Thompson, we are all attention.”
-
-“In the first place, then,” the little man remarked, amid dead silence,
-as he sipped his punch, “let me say you have, in my judgment, enormously
-underestimated the amount of money in the rooms.”
-
-“Ah!”
-
-“I know the place well, and speak with some authority.”
-
-“Just what we want.”
-
-“Now, there are nine roulette and four trente-et-quarante tables. Each,
-I am told, is furnished with £4000 to begin play on for the day; total,
-£52,000.”
-
-“Mark this, gentlemen!” cried the agitated Brentin.
-
-“But each table wins per diem, roughly speaking, about £400; so that, if
-you select, say, ten o’clock in the evening for your attempt, you may
-count on £5200 more—total, say, £58,000.”
-
-“Make a note, gentlemen,” said Brentin, “that we select ten-thirty, to
-make sure.”
-
-“That does not take into account the money lying there already staked by
-the players, which you may calculate as fully £3000 more.”
-
-“Oh, go slow, Mr. Bailey Thompson, sir, go slow!”
-
-“But where your underestimation is most marked,” said the impressive
-little man, sweeping his eyes round the attentive circle, “is in
-calculating the reserve in the vaults. In short, I have no hesitation in
-saying that, taking everything into consideration, there must be at
-least half a million of money lying in the Casino premises,
-at—the—very—least!”
-
-In the dead silence, broken only by the taking in of breath, I could
-hear Lucy playing the piano down-stairs in the little room behind the
-bar.
-
-Mr. Thompson sipped his punch again and looked at us calmly over the rim
-of his tumbler.
-
-“And you think the money in the vaults is as easily got at as the rest?”
-Bob Hines asked, in a constrained voice.
-
-“That I shouldn’t like to say,” Thompson cautiously replied. “I can tell
-you, however, that I have myself twice seen the bank broken; which only
-means, by-the-way, that the £4000 at that particular table had been
-won.”
-
-“And what happened?”
-
-“Play at that table was merely suspended while a further supply was
-being fetched from the vaults.”
-
-“And where are the vaults?”
-
-“Below the building somewhere, but precisely where I cannot tell you;
-but I have no doubt, once the rooms are in your possession, and, given
-the time, you would have no difficulty whatever in breaking into them.”
-
-Impressive silence again, broken at last by Brentin. “And now, sir, will
-you be good enough to give us some idea of the amount of opposition we
-are likely to meet with?”
-
-Bailey Thompson looked meditative, and, after a pause, proceeded.
-“Outside the building, at every twenty paces or so, you will find men
-stationed. They are merely firemen, whose chief duty it is to see no
-bomb is thrown into the rooms or deposited outside by the anarchists,
-who have frequently threatened it. They are not soldiers, and are not in
-any way armed.”
-
-Teddy Parsons breathed heavily and murmured, “Capital!”
-
-“And what force is there inside?”
-
-“There are a great number of men about, attendants and so forth, but I
-cannot conceive them capable of any resistance.”
-
-“You don’t imagine they are secretly armed?” asked the palpitating
-Teddy.
-
-“Dear me, no, any more than the attendants at an ordinary club!”
-
-“In short,” said Mr. Brentin, “you feel pretty confident that neither
-inside nor outside we are likely to encounter a single weapon of
-offence?”
-
-“Perfectly confident. Perfectly confident, gentlemen.”
-
-“And what about the army?” Parsons asked. “I understand the Prince of
-Monaco has an army of seventy men.”
-
-“Quite correct,” Bailey Thompson replied, “but it is stationed up in
-Monaco, at least a mile away.”
-
-“Then it would be some time before they could be mustered.”
-
-“Besides,” Mr. Brentin dryly observed, “they are not likely to be of
-much use unless they can swim. We propose to escape on board the
-_Amaranth_.”
-
-“That’s your best chance, gentlemen,” said Mr. Thompson—“in fact, your
-only practicable one.”
-
-“And you think six of us are enough for the business?” asked Masters.
-
-“You will be the best judges of that, perhaps, when you see the place.
-My own feeling is that, to make it all perfectly safe, you should be at
-least a dozen.”
-
-“If necessary,” said Mr. Brentin, “we can always impress half a dozen of
-our crew. Nothing like a jolly Jack-tar for a job of this kind.”
-
-“If you do,” smiled Bailey Thompson, “you will have to fig them out in
-what they call _tenue de ville convenable_. They won’t let them into the
-rooms in their common sailor dress. Why, gentlemen, they refused me
-admission once because my boots were dusty. Clean hands don’t so much
-matter,” he added, in his sly fashion.
-
-Then he rose and remarked, “I must now be returning to Wharton; my poor
-old friend Crage is in low spirits, and I have undertaken not to be more
-than half an hour away from him. If there is any further information
-wanted, however—”
-
-“Just this,” said Hines; “taking it at its worst, and supposing we are
-all, or any of us, captured, what do you imagine will be our fate?”
-
-Mr. Thompson shrugged his shoulders. “You will be treated with every
-courtesy; you will undoubtedly be tried, but—if only from the fact of
-your failing—you will, I should think, be let off easily. If you
-succeed, and all of you get clear away, I do not imagine there will be
-any serious pursuit, for policy will close the authorities’ mouth; they
-will not care to advertise to the world how easily the place can be
-looted. In fact, from what I know of them, they will most likely take
-particular pains to deny it has ever been done at all. You see,
-gentlemen, the entire Continental press is in their pay.”
-
-“There is, no doubt, a criminal court and a prison at Monaco?”
-
-“Oh yes; and if, unfortunately, you are caught, you will all be
-sentenced for life, I imagine.”
-
-“I don’t call that being let off easy,” grunted Teddy.
-
-“Perhaps not in theory, but in practice, yes; for in a year or so you
-will find yourselves free to stroll about the town, and even down to
-Monte Carlo.”
-
-“In fact, bolt?” said Masters.
-
-“Exactly; more especially if your relatives pay due attention to the
-jailers and see they want for nothing. In conclusion, gentlemen, I drink
-to your enterprise, and wish you all well through it. _Au revoir!_” And
-with a courteous bow and wave of his gloved hand (he wore dogskin gloves
-the whole time), Mr. Bailey Thompson, accompanied by the jubilant
-Brentin, withdrew.
-
-“Well,” I said, “what do you say now?”
-
-There was a brief silence, and then Teddy Parsons observed, “It seems to
-me we may as well go.”
-
-“Half a million of money!” murmured Forsyth, meditatively, “and most of
-it for hospitals.”
-
-“I think, out of _that_, you might manage to stand me a swimming-bath as
-well as a gymnasium, eh?” whispered Bob Hines.
-
-Mr. Brentin returned to us radiant. “Well, gentlemen, what do you think
-of it all now?”
-
-“They are coming,” I ventured to say, and the band of brothers nodded.
-
-“But, I say!” spluttered Masters, who had for the most part kept
-silent—“who is Mr. Bailey Thompson? Who knows anything about him? Who
-can guarantee he won’t give us away to the Monte Carlo people, and have
-us all quodded before we can even get a look in?”
-
-Mr. Brentin frowned. “I will answer for Mr. Thompson with my life!” he
-cried. “He is a gentleman of the most royal integrity. I have studied
-him in every social relation, and I never knew him fail.”
-
-“Oh, well, that’ll do,” interrupted Bob Hines, who had all along shown
-some impatience at Brentin’s long speeches. “We only want to know
-somebody is responsible for his not selling us, that’s all.”
-
-A responsibility Mr. Brentin undertook with the greatest cheerfulness
-and readiness, and that, mind you, for a man who turned out to be
-Scotland Yard personified—who, but for his inane jealousy of the French
-police and his desire to effect our capture single-handed, would have
-been the means of casting five highly strung English gentlemen, and one
-excitable American, into lifelong chains; and who, on the very morning
-after his interview with us (as he afterwards confessed to me), was
-actually at Whitehall concerting plans with the authorities there how
-best to catch us _in flagrante delicto_!
-
-How, on the contrary, we caught _him_, and had him deported to the
-southernmost point of Greece, forms one of my choicest memories, and
-will now soon be related at sufficient length.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- MONTE CARLO—MR. VAN GINKEL’S YACHT _SARATOGA_—WE PROSPECT—
- FORTUNATE DISCOVERY OF THE POINT OF ATTACK—FIRST VISIT TO THE
- ROOMS
-
-
-IT was a brilliant January day, mild and sunny, when Mr. Brentin,
-Parsons, and I were standing in the old bastion on the point of Monaco,
-straining our gaze for a glimpse of the _Amaranth_. In front stretched
-the flickering, shifting pavement of the Mediterranean, of a deep,
-smooth sapphire, ruffled here and there, as the nap of a hat brushed the
-wrong way. Nothing to be seen on it but the one loose white sail of a
-yacht drifting out of harbor past the point.
-
-We had strolled up the long ramp from the Condamine and through the
-gateway leading to the old bastions, chiefly to see whether they were
-provided with guns; we were relieved to find they were not—mere
-peaceable flower-walks, in fact, and already blossoming with geranium.
-
-From the unfinished cathedral behind us in the old town, crushed and
-huddled together like a Yorkshire fishing village, came the rolling
-throb of the heavy mid-day bell; up from the harbor far below, the smart
-bugle-call of a French corvette. Little figures in white ran about the
-deck, and the tricolor fluttered from the peak. Close alongside her lay
-an American yacht, the _Saratoga_, belonging to Mr. Van Ginkel, a former
-friend of Mr. Brentin’s. Both the vessels caused us a considerable
-amount of uneasiness; the corvette carried guns, the _Saratoga_ was
-noted for her speed. It was quite uncertain how long they might continue
-to grace the harbor. One could easily blow us out of the water; the
-other could just as easily give us an hour’s start, take fifty men on
-board, pursue, overhaul, and bring us back, flushed though in other
-respects we might be with victory.
-
-We had already been three days in Monte Carlo, and so far there had been
-no sign of their departure. “If the worst comes,” said Mr. Brentin, “we
-must take Van Ginkel into our confidence and indooce him to take a trip
-over to San Remo on the night of our attempt. The mischief is, I am so
-little of his acquaintance now I hesitate to ask so great a favor.”
-
-“What sort of man is he?” I asked.
-
-“Well, sir, we were classmates at Harvard in ’60. Since then, though
-full of good-will, we have scarcely met. I understand, however, he has
-some stomach trouble, and is ay considerable invalid.”
-
-“Married?”
-
-“Di-vorced. Mrs. Van Ginkel is now the Princess Danleno, of Rome, a
-widow of large wealth. She owns the Villa Camellia at Cannes, and is
-over here constantly, in the season, they tell me. She plays heavily on
-a highly ingenious and complicated system of her own, which costs her
-about as much as the _Saratoga_ costs her former husband.”
-
-We had taken up our abode at the “Hôtel Monopôle”—a hotel recommended
-to us by Mr. Bailey Thompson, by-the-way, for purposes of his own. It is
-a quiet little house, up the hill, and not far from the “Victoria”;
-there we had safely arrived three days before—Parsons, Brentin, Bob
-Hines, and I. Forsyth, Masters, my sister Mrs. Rivers, and Miss Rybot
-had embarked in the _Amaranth_ from Portsmouth a few days before we left
-London, and were now about due at Monte Carlo. My brother-in-law, the
-publisher, had made no difficulty to my sister’s joining the expedition,
-as to the true object of which he of course knew nothing; in fact, he
-was delighted she could get a holiday on the Riviera so cheaply. It was
-understood she was not to play, and not to spend more than £10 _en
-route_. I heard afterwards that Paternoster Row simply ran with his
-brag. “I’m a bachelor just at present. My wife’s yachting in the
-Mediterranean with some rich Americans. Very hospitable people; they
-wanted me to come, but really, just now—” etc., etc.
-
-We had spent our first three days, not unprofitably, in prospecting the
-place. We reached Monte Carlo in the afternoon, and at once drove up to
-the hotel. Almost the first thing we saw was a large board over a little
-house on the hillside, close by the Crédit Lyonnais, with “_Avances sur
-bijoux_” on it.
-
-Brentin chuckled. “Well, gentlemen,” he said, “we sha’n’t play the game
-quite so low down as that, eh? It will be either neck or nothing with
-us.”
-
-It was five o’clock before we started to go down to the Casino. We set
-out in solemn silence, down the steep and glaring white road, past the
-“Victoria” and the chemist’s. At the head of the gaudy, painted gardens,
-that look like the supreme effort of a _modiste_, we came in full view
-of the rooms. There we paused, choked, the most sensitive of us, by our
-emotions.
-
-In front there was a long strip of gay flower-beds and white pebble
-paths, flanked by rows of California palms. To my excited fancy they
-were the planted feather brooms of _valets-de-place_—moral
-_valets-de-place_ who had set out to sweep the place clean but had never
-had the courage to go further. To the right of us were the hotels—the
-“St. James’s” and the “De Paris”; to the left, the Casino gardens again,
-and the shallow pools where the frogs croak so dolorously at nightfall.
-They are, I believe (for I am a Pythagorean), the souls of ruined
-gamblers, still croaking out their _quatre premier_, their _dix-quinze_,
-their _douze dernier_.
-
-“Peace, batrachians!” I cried to them one evening, in the exalted mood
-that now became common to me. “Be still, hoarse souls! push no more
-shadowy stakes upon a board of shadows with your webbed fingers. We are
-here to avenge ye!”
-
-Then we went on down to the front of the rooms. There, unable to find a
-seat, we leaned against a lamp-post and gloated on the fantastic
-building that held our future possessions. On our left was the Café de
-Paris, overflowing with _consommateurs_ at little tables under the
-awning; from the swirling whirlpool of noise made by the Hungarian band
-issued a maimed but recognizable English comic air. The sun was just
-setting in a matchless sky of Eton blue; the breeze had dropped, and the
-dingy Monaco flag over the Casino hung inert.
-
-“Soldiers!” whispered Teddy, giving me a frightened nudge.
-
-They were, apparently, a couple of officers of the prince’s army,
-strolling round, smoking cheap cigars; they carried no side arms, and
-were of no particular physique. “Besides,” I said, “they are not allowed
-to enter the rooms. Don’t be so nervous, Teddy.”
-
-“Let us go down on to the terrace,” murmured Brentin, “and view the
-place from the back. We must see how close we can get the yacht up!”
-
-So we went to the right, past the jingling omnibus crawling up from the
-Condamine, down the steps, and on to the terrace facing the sea. We
-passed the firemen Bailey Thompson told us we should find there, five or
-six of them; one at every twenty paces, in uniform, with an odd sort of
-gymnastic belt on. They were stationed at the back, too, and clearly
-formed a complete protection against any possible bomb-throwing.
-
-“There are too many of those men,” observed Brentin, irritably. “We
-shall have to do something to draw them off on our great night or
-they’ll get in the way.”
-
-Then we went and looked over the balustrade of the terrace. Below us ran
-the railway from Monaco; on the other side of the line, connected by an
-iron bridge with the Casino terrace, was the pigeon-shooting club-house
-and grounds. They formed a sort of bastion, jutting out into the sea;
-the pale, wintry grass was still marked with the traps of last year.
-
-“_That_ won’t do!” Brentin said, decisively, after a few moments’
-survey. “The run’s too far over that bridge and down across the grass.
-Besides, we should want rope ladders before we could get down the wall.
-Come, gentlemen, let us try this way.”
-
-We went to the extreme right of the terrace, and there, miraculously
-enough, we found at once the very thing we wanted. Mr. Brentin merely
-pointed at it in silence, keeping his attitude till we had all grasped
-the situation. It was a rickety gate at the head of an evidently unused
-flight of steps, leading down on to the railway line below. Beside it
-stood a weather-worn board with “_Défense d’entrée au public_” on it. It
-looked singularly out of place amid all that smart newness; but there it
-was, the very thing we were in search of.
-
-The railway below ran six or eight feet above the sea, without any
-protecting parapet to speak of. Just at the angle where the
-pigeon-shooting ground jutted out there was a sort of broken space,
-where, for some reason (perhaps to allow the employés to descend), rocks
-were piled up from the shore. A boat could be there in waiting; the
-yacht could lie thirty yards off; if we had designed the place
-ourselves, we couldn’t have done it better.
-
-Mr. Brentin slowly pointed a fateful finger down the steps, across the
-line, to the corner where the shore lay so close and handy.
-
-“Do you observe it, gentlemen?” he whispered, awe-struck—“do you take
-it all in? There is no tide in the Mediterranean; the edge of the sea
-will always be there. Even if the night turns out as black as velvet we
-could find the boat there blindfold.”
-
-It was a solemn moment, broken only by the jingle of omnibus bells. I
-felt like Wolfe when he first spied the broken path that led up the
-cliff face from the St. Lawrence to the Heights of Abraham.
-
-By accident or design, Brentin gave Teddy Parsons’s white Homburg hat a
-tilt with his elbow; it tumbled off down the face of the terrace and
-fell out of sight on to the line.
-
-“There’s your chance, Teddy,” I said. “Run down the steps and fetch your
-hat. You can see if there’s another gate at the bottom where that bunch
-of cactus is.”
-
-Teddy came back breathless. “There’s no sort of obstruction,” he gasped.
-“It’s a clear run all the way. Only we shall have to be careful, if the
-night’s dark; some of the steps are broken.” Poor Teddy, how prophetic!
-
-We entered the rooms for the first time after dinner.
-
-Readers who have been to Monte Carlo will remember that, before going
-into the hall, there is a room on the left, where half a dozen men sit
-writing cards of admission and drawing up lists of visitors. They make
-no trouble about it, they simply ask you your hotel and
-nationality—_Anglish, hein?_—and hand you over a pink card, good only
-for one day. Then you go to the right and leave your stick. Neither
-stick nor umbrella are allowed in the rooms. “Another point in our
-favor,” as I whispered to Brentin.
-
-Facing is the large hall; up and down stroll gamblers, come out for a
-breath of air or the whiff of a cigarette. Any one may use it, or the
-concert-room on the right, or the reading-rooms above, without a ticket;
-the ticket is needed only for the gambling. You can even cash a check or
-discount a bill there; for clerks are in attendance from the different
-banking-houses, within and without the principality, who will attend to
-your wants as a loser or take charge of your winnings.
-
-On the left, heavy doors are constantly swinging. You can hear, if you
-listen, as they swing, the faint, enticing clink of the five-franc
-pieces within.
-
-“Oh, my friends,” murmured Brentin, as we moved towards them, “support
-me!”
-
-He presented his pink card with a low bow to the two men guarding the
-entrance; we followed, and the next minute were palpitating in the
-stifling atmosphere of the last of the European public infernos.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- MRS. WINGHAM AND TEDDY PARSONS—HE FOOLISHLY CONFIDES IN HER—I
- MAKE A SIMILAR MISTAKE
-
-
-NOW there was staying at our hotel, among other quiet people, a quiet
-old lady, whom, from her accent and the way she occasionally stumbled
-over an h, I took to be the widow of a well-to-do tradesman, a suburban
-_bon marché_, or stores. She played regularly every afternoon till
-dinner-time, dressed in black, with a veil down just below the tip of
-her nose, and worn black kid gloves, staking mostly on the _pair_ or
-_impair_ at roulette; and every evening she sat in the hotel over a bit
-of wood-fire, reading either _Le Petit Niçois_ or an odd volume of
-_Sartor Resartus_, which, with some ancient torn _Graphics_, formed the
-library of the “Monopôle.” Her name I discovered afterwards to be Mrs.
-Wingham.
-
-It was only the third evening after our arrival that, going into the
-reading-room to write my daily loving letter to Lucy, there I found Mrs.
-Wingham and Teddy Parsons seated each side of the fire, talking away as
-confidentially as if they had known each other all their lives. Bob
-Hines, who had taken to gambling and couldn’t be kept away from the
-rooms, and Brentin had gone down to the Casino.
-
-Few things I know more difficult than to write a letter and at the same
-time listen to a conversation, and I soon found myself writing down
-scraps of Teddy’s inflated talk, working it, in spite of myself, into my
-letter to Lucy—talk all the more inflated as I had come into the room
-quietly at his back, and he didn’t know I was there.
-
-He was telling the old lady all about his father, the colonel, and how
-he had fought through the Crimea without a scratch. Yes, he was in the
-army himself—at least, the auxiliary portion of it: the second line. He
-lived most of the year at Southport, when he wasn’t out with his
-regiment, or hunting and shooting with friends, and always came up to
-London for the Derby and stayed in Duke Street. He was very fond of a
-bit of racing, and, in fact, owned some race horses—or, rather, “a
-chaser”—
-
-“A what, sir?” asked the old woman, who was listening to him with her
-mouth open.
-
-“A chaser—a steeple-chaser, don’t you know—‘Tenderloin,’ which was
-entered for the Grand National, and would be sure to be heavily backed.”
-
-No, he didn’t care much about gambling; a man didn’t get a fair run for
-his money at Monte Carlo, the bank reserved too many odds in their own
-favor; to say nothing, as I knew, of his being kept very short of
-pocket-money by the colonel. And then he was actually fool enough to
-say, with a self-satisfied laugh, that he’d a notion the right way to
-treat the bank was to raid it.
-
-“Raid it, sir?” cried the old woman.
-
-“Yes, certainly, raid it; go into the rooms with a pistol and shout
-‘Hands up, everybody!’ and carry off all the money on board a yacht, and
-be off, full speed.” Did Mrs. Wingham know if it had ever been tried?
-
-From that to confiding our whole plan would have been only one step; but
-just at that moment in came Mrs. Sellars and Miss Marter, the only two
-other English ladies in the hotel, and Teddy and Mrs. Wingham fell to
-talking in whispers.
-
-Mrs. Sellars, who was a stout, comfortable-looking person, with a large
-nose, a high color, and an expansive figure, generally attired in a
-blouse and a green velveteen skirt, was given to walking up and down the
-reading-room, moaning in theatrical agony over the disquieting news from
-South Africa. If she didn’t get a letter from her husband in the
-morning, she didn’t know what she should do; it was weeks since she had
-heard from him; something told her he was dead—and so on. Every
-distressed turn she took brought her nearer the ramshackle piano; so at
-last Miss Marter, mainly to stop her (for old maids don’t take much
-interest in other women’s husbands, alive or dead), with some asperity
-remarked, “Sing us something, dear; it will calm you.”
-
-Then she came to me and said, excitedly, “_Do_ you mind if I bring down
-my little dog? I always ask, as people sometimes object. It is the
-dearest little dog, and always sits in my lap.”
-
-Teddy gave a violent start when he heard me answer, and knew he was
-detected. He got up, and, pretending to hum, immediately left the room.
-I didn’t like to follow at once, as I felt inclined; it would look as
-though Mrs. Sellars’s threatened singing drove me away. But the moment
-she finished I meant to go and give the wind-bag a good blowing-up, and
-meantime went on with my letter.
-
-Mrs. Sellars hooted “’Tis I!” and “In the Gloaming,” and was beginning
-“Twickenham Ferry” when she broke down over the accompaniment, rose, and
-came to the fire. Miss Marter was sitting one side of it, stroking her
-torpid little terrier, and Mrs. Wingham (who was focussing _Sartor
-Resartus_ through her glasses) on the other.
-
-“Thank you, dear,” said Miss Marter. “I hope you feel calmer.”
-
-“I shall never be calmer,” Mrs. Sellars moaned, “till George is home
-again at my side.”
-
-“Well, dear,” Miss Marter maliciously replied, looking down her long
-nose, “you know you insisted on his going.”
-
-So I left the two ladies to squabble as to who was mainly responsible
-for George’s being in South Africa in such ticklish times, and went in
-search of Teddy.
-
-He was neither in the _fumoir_ nor his bedroom, so down I went to the
-rooms.
-
-There I found Bob Hines punting on the middle dozen and the last six at
-roulette, with a pile of five-franc pieces before him.
-
-“Those your winnings?” I whispered; to which he gave the not over-polite
-reply, “How can you be such a fool?”
-
-So I knew he was losing, and went off in search of Brentin.
-
-I found him in an excited circle watching a common-looking Englishman at
-the _trente-et-quarante_ tables, who with great coolness was staking the
-maximum of twelve thousand francs, two at a time, one on _couleur_ and
-one on black. In front of him the notes were piled so high that, being a
-little man, he had to press them down with his elbows before he could
-use his rake. Sometimes he won one bundle of notes, neatly pinned
-together and representing the maximum; sometimes both, as _couleur_ and
-black turned out alike. Rarely he lost both. Others were staking, but
-mostly only paltry louis, or the broad, shining five-louis pieces one
-only sees at Monte Carlo. There was the usual church-like silence,
-broken only by the dry, sharp tones of the croupier’s harsh voice, “_Le
-jeu est fait!_” and then, sharper still, “_Rien ne va plus!_”
-
-Once the tension was broken by a titter of laughter, as a withered
-little Italian with a frightened air threw a five-franc piece down on
-the board and the croupier pushed it back. The poor devil apparently
-didn’t know that gold only may be staked at _trente-et-quarante_.
-
-I plucked Brentin by the sleeve and drew him to a side seat against the
-wall. “I hope that gentleman may be staking here this day week,” he
-chuckled. “Notes are easy to carry, and I myself have seen him win sixty
-thousand francs.”
-
-When he heard about Teddy he was furious. It was all I could do to
-prevent him from going off at once to the hotel and insisting on his
-leaving Monte Carlo by the next train.
-
-“I allow,” he said, “I was precipitate with Bailey Thompson, but at
-least we drew something out of him in the way of information. But to
-confide in a blathering old woman, who has nothing to do but eat and
-talk—”
-
-I went back to the hotel, only to find Teddy’s bedroom door locked, and
-to have my knocking greeted with a loud, sham snore. Mrs. Wingham I
-found still in the reading-room, alone, still focussing _Sartor
-Resartus_ with her shocked and puzzled expression.
-
-“Your friend has just gone up to bed,” she remarked, “if you are looking
-for him.”
-
-I thanked her, and, sitting the other side of the fire, proceeded to
-draw her out. She soon told me Teddy was so like a nephew of hers she
-had recently lost she had felt obliged to speak to him. She noticed him
-at once, she said, the first evening at dinner, and felt drawn to him
-immediately. What a fine, manly young feller he was, and how full of
-sperrit.
-
-Yes, I said, he was, and often had very ingenious ideas—for instance,
-that notion of his to raid the tables I had overheard him discussing
-with her. But, then, there was all the difference in the world between
-having an idea and the carrying it out, wasn’t there? Merely as a matter
-of curiosity, what did she think of the notion—she, who doubtless knew
-the place so well?
-
-The artful old woman—Bailey Thompson’s sister, if you please, and spy,
-as it afterwards turned out; hence his recommending us the “Monopôle,”
-so that she might keep an eye on us and report—the artful old woman
-looked puzzled, as though she were trying to remember what it was Teddy
-had said on the subject. Then she began to laugh. “Oh, I didn’t think
-much of that. Why, look at all the people there are about! Why, you’d
-need a ridgiment!”
-
-Now, will it be believed that I, who had just been so righteously
-indignant with Parsons for his talkative folly, did myself (feeling
-uncommonly piqued at her scornful tone) immediately set out to prove to
-her the thing was perfectly possible, and then and there explain in
-detail how it could all be successfully done, and with how small a
-force. I did, indeed, so true as I am sitting writing here now, in our
-flat in Victoria Street.
-
-Mrs. Wingham listened to me attentively, laughing to herself and saying,
-“Dear! dear! so it might!” as she rubbed her knuckled old hands between
-her black silk knees. When I had done, I felt so vexed with myself I
-could have bitten my tongue out.
-
-I rose, however, and, observing, “Of course, it is an idea and nothing
-else, and never will be realized,” bade her good-night and left the
-room, feeling uncommonly weak and foolish. She murmured, “Oh, of
-course!” as I closed the noisy glass door behind me and went up-stairs
-to bed.
-
-A few minutes later, remembering I had left my book on the table where I
-had been writing to Lucy, I went down-stairs again to fetch it. Mrs.
-Wingham was still there, sitting at the table writing a letter. The
-envelope, already written, was lying close by my book, and I couldn’t
-help reading it.
-
-It was positively addressed to “Jas. B. Thompson, Esq., 3 Aldrich Road
-Villas, Brixton Rise, S. E. London.”
-
-I felt so faint I could scarcely get out of the room again and up the
-stairs.
-
-But such is our insane confidence, where we ourselves and our own doings
-are concerned—such, at any rate, was mine in my lucky star—that I
-really felt no difficulty in persuading myself the whole thing was
-merely a coincidence, and that the writing of the letter had nothing
-whatever to do with either my or Teddy Parsons’s divulgations; more
-especially as the Bailey, on which Thompson evidently piqued himself,
-was omitted.
-
-And I determined to say nothing about it to Brentin, partly because I
-didn’t care about being blackguarded by an American, and partly because
-I felt convinced it was all an accident, and nothing would come of it.
-Nor, in my generosity, did I do more to Teddy Parsons than temperately
-point out the folly he had been guilty of, and beg him to be more
-careful in future, which he very cheerfully promised, and for which
-magnanimity of mine he was, as I meant he should be, really uncommonly
-grateful.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- ARRIVAL OF THE _AMARANTH_—ALL WELL ON BOARD—THEIR FIRST
- EXPERIENCE OF THE ROOMS
-
-
-THE next afternoon, soon after four, the _Amaranth_ arrived in harbor.
-
-Bob Hines was gambling, as usual, but Brentin, Teddy, and I went down to
-the Condamine to meet them. Teddy and Brentin had had their row out in
-the morning, to which I had listened in silence—with the indulgent air
-of a man who doesn’t want to add to the unpleasantness—and now were
-pretty good friends again. It was clearly understood, however, that no
-new acquaintances were to be made, male or female, and that henceforth
-any one of us seen talking to a stranger was immediately to be sent
-home.
-
-I fear the party from the _Amaranth_ did not have a very good impression
-of Monte Carlo to begin with, for they landed in the Condamine, just
-where the town drain-pipes lie, and came ashore, each of them, with a
-handkerchief to the nose.
-
-“So this is the Riviera!” snuffled my good sister. “I understood it was
-embosomed in flowers.”
-
-They all looked very brown and well, and seemed in high spirits.
-
-As for the yacht, she had behaved splendidly all through, and the
-conduct and polite attentions of Captain Evans and the crew had been
-above all praise. The only difficulty had been to explain away the shell
-and the three cannon; for which Forsyth had found the ingenious excuse
-that they were wanted for the Riff pirates, in case we determined to
-voyage along the African coast, where they are said to abound and will
-sometimes attack a yacht.
-
-We all strolled up the hill together, and, such were their spirits,
-nothing would content the new arrivals but an immediate visit to the
-rooms. Miss Rybot, especially, was as cheerful as a blackbird in April;
-she had come there to gamble, she said, and gamble she would at once.
-She and Masters were evidently on the best of terms, and even the
-captious Brentin was pleased with what people who write books call her
-“infectious gayety.”
-
-“You have your own little schemes,” she cried, “and I have mine. I am
-going to win fifty pounds to pay my debts with, and then I am going
-home, whether you have finished or not. And if I haven’t finished, you
-will all have to leave me here.”
-
-They were soon provided with their pink admission-cards (ours had that
-morning, after the usual pretended scrutiny and demur, been exchanged
-for white monthly ones), and, after leaving their cloaks, passed through
-the swing-doors into the rooms.
-
-It was just that impressive hour—the only one, I think, at Monte
-Carlo—when the Casino footmen, in their ill-fitting liveries, zigzagged
-with faded braid, bring in the yellow oil-lamps with hanging green
-shades, and sling them from the long brass chains over the tables. The
-rest of the rooms lie in twilight, before the electric light is turned
-up. Dim figures sweep noiselessly as spectres over the dull-shining
-parquet floor, and, like a spear, I have seen the last long ray of
-southern sunshine strike in and touch the ghastly hollow cheek of some
-old woman fingering her coins, lifeless and mechanical as Charon
-fingering his passage-money for the dead; but, just over the tables, the
-yellow light from the lamp falls brilliant, yet softly, brightly
-illuminating the gamblers’ hands and some few of their faces, throwing
-the white numbers on the rich green cloth as strongly into relief as
-though newly sewn on there of tape.
-
-“_Faites votre jeu, messieurs!_” croaks the croupier, in his dry,
-toneless voice.
-
-With deft fingers he spins the active, rattling little ball.
-
-“_Le jeu est fait!_”
-
-The white ball begins to tire, drops out of its circuit.
-
-“_Rien ne va plus!_”
-
-A few seconds of leaping indecision and restlessness, before the ball
-falls finally into a number and remains there, while the board still
-spins.
-
-“_Trente-six!—Rouge, pair et manque!_”
-
-The croupiers’ rakes are busy, pulling in the money lost; the money won
-is thrown with dull, heavy thuds and clinks on to the table. In a few
-moments it is begun all over again.
-
-“_Faites votre jeu, messieurs!_”
-
-“So this is Monte Carlo!” whispered my sister, in the proper, hushed
-tones, as though asking me for something to put in the collection. “My
-one objection is, no one looks in the least haggard or anxious. I
-understood I should see such terrible faces, and they all look as bored
-as people at an ordinary London dinner-party. Take me round.”
-
-Brentin came with us, and we visited each of the busy roulette-tables in
-turn. Monte Carlo was very full, and round some of the tables the crowd
-was so deep it was impossible to get near enough to look, much less to
-play. But between the tables there were large vacant spaces of
-dull-shining, greasy parquet; the tables looked like populous places on
-the map, and the flooring like open country. Here and there stood the
-footmen, straight out of an old Adelphi melodrama; some of them carried
-trays and glasses of water, and some gave you cards to mark the winning
-numbers and the colors.
-
-“It is not quite so splendid and gay as I imagined,” my sister observed.
-“In fact, it’s all rather dim and dingy. Do you know it reminds me of
-the Pavilion at Brighton more than anything else. And how common some of
-the people are! Isn’t that your friend, Mr. Hines?”
-
-Bob Hines was sitting in rather a melancholy heap, with a pile of
-five-franc pieces in front of him, and a card on which he was morosely
-writing the numbers as they came up.
-
-“Let’s ask him how he’s doing?”
-
-“Never speak to a gambler,” I whispered; “it’s considered unlucky.”
-
-“Judging from his expression, he will be glad to get something back in
-your raid! And why seat himself between those two terrible old women?”
-
-“They look,” Brentin murmured, “like representations of friend Zola’s
-the fat and the lean. Sakes alive! they’d make the fortune of a dime
-museum. Those women are freaks, ma’am, freaks.”
-
-Hines was sitting between two ladies; one, with a petulant face of old
-childishness, was enormously stout. Her eyebrows were densely blackened,
-her pendulous cheeks as dusty with powder as the Mentone road. She was
-gorgeously overdressed; her broad bosom, fluid as of arrested molten
-tallow, was hung with colored jewels, like a _bambino_. With huge gloved
-hands and arms she was wielding a rake, whereof poor Bob had
-occasionally the end in his face. Beside her, on the green cloth, lay a
-withered bunch of roses, dead of her large, cruel grasp. At her back
-stood her husband, a German Jew financier, who couldn’t keep his
-pince-nez on. Continually he smoothed his thin hair and tried to get her
-away, grumbling and moving from leg to leg; for hours he would stand
-behind her chair, supplying her with money, for she nearly always lost.
-Occasionally she grabbed other people’s stakes, or they grabbed hers.
-Then she was sublime in her horrible ill-humor; half rising, with her
-great arms resting on the table, she shouted at the croupiers to be
-paid, in harsh, rattling, fish-fag tones. The sunken corners of her
-small mouth were drawn upward; the deep-set eyes worked in dull fury;
-you saw short, white teeth that once had smiled in a pretty Watteau
-face. Now the body was old and torpid and swollen; but the rabbit
-intelligence was still undeveloped, except in the direction of its
-rapacity.
-
-Poor Bob Hines! He was indeed badly placed! On his other side sat a
-lath-and-plaster widow in the extensive mourning of a Jay’s
-advertisement. Her face was yellow and damaged as a broken old fresco at
-Florence; thin, oblong, brittle, only the semi-circular, blackened
-eyebrows seemed alive. The dyed, pallid hair looked dead as a Lowther
-Arcade doll’s; dead were her teeth, her long, thin, griffin hands with
-curved nails. Decomposition, even by an emotion, was somehow palpably
-arrested; perhaps she was frozen by the bitter chill of fatal zero.
-Horrible, old, crape-swathed mummy, one would have said she had lost
-even her husband at play. Who could ever have been found to love her? At
-whom had she ever smiled? at what had she ever laughed or wept? Bride of
-Frankenstein’s monster, she worked her muck-rake with the small, dry,
-galvanized gestures of an Edison invention. Poor Bob Hines! It sickened
-me to think these women, and others perhaps worse, were of the same
-sisterhood with Lucy. What a day when we should sweep them all out
-before us, as the fresh autumn wind sweeps the withered leaves across
-the walks of Kensington Gardens!
-
-“So this is Monte Carlo!” murmured my sister again. “It stifles me! Take
-me out to the Café de Paris and give me some tea.”
-
-As she took my arm and we went down the steps, “Easier place, however,
-to raid,” she remarked, “I never saw. As for the morality of it, I was a
-little doubtful at first, but now—”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- INFLUENCE OF CLIMATE ON ADVENTURE—UNEXPECTED ARRIVAL OF LUCY—HER
- REVELATIONS—DANGER AHEAD
-
-
-SO a few days passed, and, pleasantly idle though it all was, it began
-to be time for us to think seriously of our purport in being at Monte
-Carlo at all. Our party had very easily fallen into the ways of the
-place, and appeared to be enjoying themselves, each in their own
-fashion, amazingly.
-
-“Here’s Teddy’s got a bicycle,” as I said to Brentin, “and is always
-over at Mentone with friends. Bob Hines does nothing but gamble, and is
-scarcely ever with us, even at meal-times. He lives on sandwiches and
-hot _grog Américaine_ at the Café de Paris. Forsyth struts about in
-fancy suits, making eyes at the ladies, and Masters is all day at the
-back of Miss Rybot’s chair, supplying her with fresh funds and taking
-charge of her winnings.”
-
-“_C’est magnifique_,” yawned Brentin, “_mais ce n’est pas la guerre_.”
-
-“It’s worse,” I said; “it’s Capua, simply, and must be put a stop to.”
-
-“I know if I were here a fortnight longer,” yawned my sister, “with
-nothing to do, I should desert my husband and child and be off into
-Italy along the Corniche with white mice.”
-
-“Turn pifferari; exactly,” said Brentin. “Therefore, sir, we must move
-in this business, and the sooner the better, or the golden opportunity
-will slip by us, never to return. And that’s all there is to it. We will
-summon a council of war this evening on board the _Amaranth_ and fix the
-day finally.”
-
-“Well, all I ask is,” said my sister, “that in case of failure Miss
-Rybot and I are afforded every opportunity of escape. I don’t want to
-give those Medworth Square people the chance of coming and crowing over
-me in a French prison. Besides, it wouldn’t do Frank’s business any
-good, if I were caught.”
-
-“Why, just think what a book you could make of it,” I murmured—“_Penal
-Servitude for Life; by a Lady_. Rivers would make his fortune.”
-
-What would have been, after all, the end of our adventure, whether the
-sunshine might not have softened us into finally abandoning the
-enterprise altogether—to my lasting shame and grief!—I cannot take
-upon myself to say. All I know for certain is, that if our hands had not
-been, in a measure, forced—if circumstances had not made it rather more
-dangerous for us to go back than to go on—our party would at any rate
-have needed an amount of whipping into line which would as likely as not
-have driven them into restive retirement, instead of the somewhat
-alarmed advance which was ultimately forced on us and turned out so
-entirely successful.
-
-And as it is my particular pride to think I owe the undertaking, in the
-first place, to my love for Lucy, so it is my joy to reflect how the
-final carrying of it out was due to her affection for me, that drove her
-to journey—quite unused to foreign parts as she was—right across
-Europe, alone, and give me timely warning of the dastardly scheme on
-foot for our capture and ruin.
-
-It was the very afternoon following the morning of our brief
-conversation on the terrace that I went back early to the hotel, with
-some natural feelings of depression and irritation at the growing
-callous inertia of our party.
-
-I was going up to my room, when from the reading-room I heard the sound
-of the piano. I stopped in some amazement, for there was being played an
-air I never heard any one but Lucy play. It was an old Venetian piece of
-church music (by Gordigiani, if I remember right), and I had never heard
-it anywhere but at “The French Horn,” on the rather damaged old cottage
-piano in the little room behind the bar.
-
-I stole down-stairs again, and, my heart beating, opened the glass door
-noiselessly.
-
-It was Lucy! and the next moment, with a little scream, she was in my
-arms. I took her to the sofa; for some moments she was so agitated she
-couldn’t speak, nor could I, believing, indeed, it was a ghost, till I
-felt the soft pressure of her arms and the warmth of her cheek as her
-head lay on my shoulder, while she trembled and sobbed.
-
-“Don’t be frightened,” I murmured. “It’s really I. Now, don’t cry; be
-calm and tell me all about it. We are both safe; we love each other.
-Nothing else in the world matters.”
-
-At last, in broken tones and at first with many tears, she told me the
-whole story. I listened as though I were in a dream, and my bones
-stiffened with anger and apprehension.
-
-The gist of it was briefly this: that one day Mr. Crage had come down to
-“The French Horn” and had an interview with her father in the
-bar-parlor. He had come to put an end to Mr. Thatcher’s tenancy, a
-yearly one, and turn him out of the inn, unless, as he suggested,
-exactly like a villain on the stage, Lucy would, for her father’s sake,
-engage to marry him, in which case he might remain, and at a reduced
-rent. Thatcher, who, after all, is a gentleman, declared the idea
-preposterous, more particularly as his daughter was already engaged,
-with his full consent and approbation.
-
-“Oh, ah!” snarled Crage—“to that young cockney who was down here at
-Christmas. Suppose you call her in, however, and let her speak for
-herself.”
-
-Whereupon Lucy was sent for and told of Crage’s iniquitous proposal, of
-which Thatcher very properly urged her not to think, but to refuse there
-and then.
-
-“Oh, ah!” Crage had grinned. “The young cockney has enough for you all
-and won’t grudge it, I dare say. He’s gone to Monte Carlo, ain’t he?”
-
-Yes, said Lucy, Mr. Blacker had, and had promised her not to gamble.
-
-“Gamble or not,” sneered Crage, “I know what he is up to. The police are
-already on his track. Why, I shouldn’t be the least surprised to hear
-he’s already in their hands, and condemned to penal servitude for life.”
-
-On hearing that, poor Lucy said she thought she should have dropped on
-the floor, like water. But she has the courage of her race, and, telling
-the old man in so many words he was mad, turned to leave the room.
-
-Now, it’s an odd thing that the old wretch, though he never minded being
-called a liar, never could bear any reflection on his sanity—it was the
-fusty remains, I suppose, of his old professional Clement’s Inn pride;
-so he lost his temper at once, and with many shrieks and gesticulations
-told them the whole story.
-
-That—as I have written—Bailey Thompson was a detective, frequently in
-the “Victoria” smoking-room in the course of his duty; and that Brentin
-had actually confided in him—as we know—all that we were going to do,
-that he was an old friend of Crage’s, dating from the Clement’s Inn
-days, and on Christmas night had divulged the whole scheme just as he
-had received it from us, telling him with much glee, being a season of
-jollity and good-will, how he was going to follow us to Monte Carlo and
-make every disposition to catch us in the act. Crage added that Bailey
-Thompson had rather doubted at first whether we weren’t humbugging him;
-but having since heard from his sister, Mrs. Wingham, that she believed
-we were really in earnest, was already somewhere on his way out to
-superintend our capture in person.
-
-“I didn’t know what to do,” cried Lucy, piteously; “I could only laugh
-in his face and tell him he was the victim of a practical joke.”
-
-“Practical joke!” Crage had screamed; “you wait till they’re all in
-prison; perhaps they’ll call that a practical joke, too. Now, look here,
-Thatcher, you’re a sensible man; you break off this engagement before
-the scandal overtakes you all, and I’ll treat you and your daughter
-handsomely. You shall stay on in the inn, or not, just as you please,
-and the day we’re married I’ll settle Wharton on dear Lucy here. I
-sha’n’t live so very much longer, I dare say,” he whined—“I’m
-eighty-two next month—and then she can marry the young cockney, if she
-wants to, when he’s done his time. Don’t decide now; send me up a note
-in the course of the next few days. Hang it! I won’t be hard on you;
-I’ll give you both a fortnight.”
-
-And with that and no more the wicked old man had stumped out of the bar
-parlor.
-
-Lucy’s mind was soon made up. Notwithstanding her father’s
-expostulations, she had determined to come after me and learn the truth
-for herself; and as he couldn’t come with her, to come alone. She hadn’t
-written, for fear of my telegraphing she was not to start. And here she
-was, to be told the truth, to be reassured, to be made happy once more;
-if possible, to take me home with her.
-
-“Oh, it’s not true, Vincent, dearest!” she murmured. “It’s all a fable,
-isn’t it? You’re not even dreaming of doing anything so dangerous and
-foolish?”
-
-Now, deep and true as is my affection for Lucy, I should have been quite
-unworthy of her if I had allowed myself to be turned from so deeply
-matured and worthy a purpose as ours merely by her tears.
-
-The more I had seen of Monte Carlo, the more sincerely was I convinced
-of its worthlessness, and the dignity of a serious effort to put a stop
-to it. For it is simply, as I have written, a _cocotte’s_ paradise and
-nothing more; and if, by any effort of mine, I could close it, I felt I
-should be rendering a service to humanity only second to Wilberforce and
-the Slave Trade. What a glorious moment if only I could live to see a
-large board stuck out of the Casino windows with _À Vendre_ on it, to
-say nothing of the boards taken in from outside the London hospitals and
-the closed wards in working order again, full of sufferers!
-
-So I calmed dear Lucy and told her how glad I was to see her; that above
-all things she must trust me and believe what I was doing and going to
-do was for the best and would turn out not unworthy of nor unserviceable
-to her in the long-run; more especially, if only it were, as we had
-every reason to believe it would be, successful.
-
-After some further talk, she promised to say no more and to trust me
-entirely, both now and always, begging me only to assure her I was not
-angry, and that what she had done in coming was really for my benefit
-and welfare. I told her truly she had rendered me the greatest possible
-service, and that I loved her if possible more deeply for this new proof
-of her devotion than before. Then I telegraphed to her father of her
-safety, got her something to eat, and sent her off early to bed after
-her long journey (she had come second-class, poor child, and had stopped
-once at least at every station, and twice at some), and at nine o’clock
-we went down to the Condamine to go on board the _Amaranth_ for our
-council of war.
-
-On the way down I told Brentin the reason of Lucy’s sudden visit, and
-the new danger from Bailey Thompson, who by this time was clearly on his
-way after us, if indeed he hadn’t already arrived. At the same time, I
-candidly confessed to my indiscretion with Mrs. Wingham, and the letter
-I had seen her writing to her brother. We found no difficulty in
-agreeing we both had behaved like arrant fools, and might very fairly be
-pictured as standing on the romantic, but uncomfortable, edge of a
-precipice.
-
-“But we must go on, sir,” said Brentin, with decision. “It will never do
-to back out now, after coming so far and spending so much money. We must
-never allow this shallow detective trash to frighten us; we must meet
-him in a friendly spirit, and find some means to dump him where he may
-be both remote and harmless. The Balearic Isles, for choice.”
-
-“What about the band of brothers?” I asked. “How will they regard these
-fresh revelations?”
-
-“That’s the difficulty,” replied Brentin, thoughtfully. “We must
-exercise care, sir, or they’ll be scattering off home like Virginia
-wheat-ears.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- COUNCIL OF WAR—CAPTAIN EVANS’S DECISION—I GO TO THE ROOMS AND
- CONFIDE IN MY SISTER
-
-
-WHEN the band of brothers in the saloon on board the _Amaranth_ heard
-all, or rather so much as we thought fit delicately to tell them, they
-turned—collectively and individually—pale.
-
-“Then there’s an end of it,” chattered Teddy. “It was a fool’s journey
-from the beginning, and the sooner we all go home again the better.”
-
-“The sooner you go, sir,” retorted Brentin, “the easier we shall all
-breathe. Is there any other palpitating gentleman desires to climb
-down?”
-
-“One moment, first,” said Hines; “before we decide to break up, can’t we
-consider whether there may not be a way of either stopping your friend
-Bailey Thompson _en route_, or at least rendering him powerless when he
-arrives? The fact is,” he diffidently continued, “I have lost a good
-deal of money here, and don’t altogether care about leaving it without
-an effort of some kind to get it back, to say nothing of the lark of the
-thing, which I take it has been one of its chief recommendations from
-the first.”
-
-To say nothing, too, of the fact—as I knew—that before leaving
-Folkestone he had sent out a circular to the parents of his boys to
-announce the addition of a swimming-bath and a gymnasium to his
-establishment, the non-erection of which would surely cause him to look
-more foolish than a schoolmaster cares about. And what would the boys
-say who had cheered him loudly at the end of last term, when, in a neat
-speech, he had announced his generous intention?
-
-“Spoken like ay white man!” cried Brentin. “Why, whoever supposed that
-in an enterprise of this magnitude there would not arise danger and
-difficulties? They are only just beginning, gentlemen; if any of you,
-therefore, still desire to shirk, he has only to say the word.
-Conveyance to the shore is immediately at his service; he can this
-moment go and pack his grip and be way off home. We shall be well rid of
-him.”
-
-There was a pause, and then Forsyth said:
-
-“Aren’t you going, Parsons?”
-
-Teddy lighted a cigarette nervously and replied:
-
-“Well, dash it all, let’s hear what’s proposed first.”
-
-“No, sir!” shouted Brentin, thumping the table. “You go or you stay, one
-or the other; we will have no ha-alf measures. The time for them has
-elapsed.”
-
-“Very well,” stammered the unhappy Parsons, “if you are all going to
-stay, of course I must stay too. I thought the affair was all over,
-that’s why I spoke. I wasn’t thinking, you know, of deserting my pals.”
-
-“Bravo!” cried Hines, sardonically. “You ain’t exactly a hero, Parsons,
-but I dare say you’ll do very well.”
-
-“There is just one thing I should like to point out,” Arthur Masters
-observed, “before we go any further. The affair is assuming a somewhat
-grave aspect, and it is of course possible that, in spite of all
-precautions, we may, after all, be captured, either on shore or, later,
-on board the yacht.”
-
-“Hear! Hear!” Teddy murmured.
-
-“Now, is it fair to get Captain Evans and the crew into difficulties
-without letting them know what we are going to do, and giving them the
-chance of refusing to join us first?”
-
-“Well, sir,” objected Brentin, “we always meant to tell him, but not
-until the last moment, when we should have claimed their assistance, if
-only in removing the boodle. You see, gentlemen, the British sailor is a
-fine fellow, but he is apt to tank-up and get full—full as ay goat,
-gentlemen—and in that condition he is confiding. Now we have
-unfortunately been confiding when dry, but the British sailor—”
-
-“We must risk that,” Masters replied. “And, after all, once they are
-told and have consented, they can be refused permission to go on shore
-again before we start.”
-
-“Well,” said Forsyth, “why not have Captain Evans in and tell him now;
-then he can use his discretion as to telling the crew at all till the
-last moment, or selecting the most trustworthy and sober of them for his
-confidence at once.”
-
-So we decided to send for Captain Evans before going any further.
-
-When he stepped into the saloon, smart and sailor-like, peaked cap in
-hand, Brentin begged him to be seated, and gave him one of his longest
-and blackest cigars.
-
-Then, “Captain Evans,” he said, “we have sent for you so that in case of
-this affair of ours going wrong you may not have any cause of complaint
-against us.”
-
-“Aye, aye, sir!” said the captain, “and what affair may that be?”
-
-He listened with the deepest attention and in complete silence while our
-scheme was unfolded.
-
-“Well, gentlemen,” he said, when Brentin had finished, “I will be
-perfectly frank with you. Your scheme is your own, and you know best how
-far it is likely to fail or to succeed. But if it fails and we are all
-caught, I shall never be able to persuade the authorities I was an
-innocent party, and there will be an end to any future employment. I
-have a wife and a fine little boy to think of, gentlemen; how am I going
-to support them?”
-
-“Your objection is perfectly fair, captain,” said Brentin. “My answer to
-it is, that if you get into trouble, I will personally undertake to make
-you an allowance of £150 per annum for the period dooring which you
-remain out of a berth. In the case of success, and the boodle being
-considerable, you must trust us to make you such a present or _solatium_
-as shall in my opinion repay you for any risks you may have run. How
-will that do?”
-
-“That will do, gentlemen, thank you,” the captain replied. “And what
-about the crew?”
-
-“We shall be glad if you will select six of the most elegant of your
-men, whose assistance will be needed in the rooms on the night. Clothes
-will be provided for them, and their duties will be explained in good
-time. As for the others, if they are to be told, they must not be
-allowed on shore. To-day is Wednesday; we propose to start Friday. Till
-Friday they must be confined on board.”
-
-“With the exception of the cook, gentlemen,” urged the captain. “He has
-to go on shore marketing.”
-
-“Then don’t tell the cook. Now, do we understand each other?”
-
-“Aye, aye, sir!”
-
-“One question, captain,” said Brentin, as he rose. “The French corvette
-has left the harbor, I understand?”
-
-“Yes, sir, she sailed to Villefranche yesterday.”
-
-“And the _Saratoga_, what of her?”
-
-“She’s away over at San Remo, sir, and returns some time to-night or
-to-morrow.”
-
-“Thank you, Captain Evans; that will do. Good-evening.”
-
-“My friends,” he said, as the captain closed the door, “this is going to
-cost a lot of money; let us hope we shall all come out right side up.”
-
-“And now, what about Bailey Thompson?” Bob Hines asked.
-
-“Our plan is obvious,” Brentin replied. “I must board the _Saratoga_
-first thing in the morning, reintrodooce myself to Van Ginkel, confide
-in him and beg him to take Thompson on board for us, and be off with him
-kindly down the coast. East or west, he can dump him where he pleases,
-so long as he does dump him somewhere and leave him there like dirt. How
-does that strike you, gentlemen?”
-
-“If only he can be got to go!” I answered; “and Mrs. Wingham? You must
-remember it was he who advised us to go to the Monopôle, no doubt giving
-the old lady instructions to keep an eye on us and report.”
-
-“Well,” said Brentin, “Mr. Parsons here is her friend. He must manage to
-let her know we don’t start operations till Saturday. That will put her
-off the scent. And now, gentlemen, let us discuss details and
-positions.”
-
-I left them to their discussion and went on shore to find my sister and
-Miss Rybot, who were at the rooms. My sister knew nothing whatever about
-Lucy—still less of her being at Monte Carlo. I had to make a clean
-breast of it all, and get her to take Lucy on board the yacht in the
-morning, so as to be out of Bailey Thompson’s way.
-
-I found them without much difficulty, full as the rooms were. Miss Rybot
-was seated, playing roulette, rather unsuccessfully, if I might judge
-from her ill-humored expression. Facing her, standing staring at her
-pathetically, with a soft hat crushed under his arm, was a tall, blond,
-sentimental-looking young German.
-
-“Tell that man to go away, please,” she said to me, crossly. “He’s been
-standing there staring at me the last half-hour, and he brings me bad
-luck. Tell him I hate the sight of him. Tell him to go away at once.”
-
-I explained that I was scarcely sufficient master of German for all
-that.
-
-“Keep my place, please,” she said, imperiously, and went round to the
-young man, who received her with a fascinating smile.
-
-“_Vous comprenez le Français?_” I heard her say to him, folding her arms
-and looking him resolutely full in the face.
-
-“_Oui, mademoiselle._”
-
-“_Alors, allez-vous-en, sivooplay_,” she went on; “_je n’aime pas qu’un
-homme me regarde comme ça. Vous me portez de la guigne. Allez-vous-en,
-ou j’appelle les valets. C’est inouï! Allez-vous-en! Vous avez une de
-ces figures qui porte de la guigne toujours. Entendez-vous? toujours!_”
-
-With that, entirely unconcerned, she resumed her seat, while the young
-German, who had hitherto been under the impression he had made a
-conquest, strolled off somewhat alarmed to another table.
-
-My sister I found in the farther rooms watching the
-_trente-et-quarante_. “Hullo, Vincent!” she said. “Council over? Dear
-me, I wish I hadn’t promised Frank not to play; my fingers are simply
-tingling. However, I’ve been playing in imagination and lost 40,000
-francs, so perhaps it’s just as well.”
-
-I drew her to a side seat and soon told her all about Lucy and her
-arrival, softening down the Bailey Thompson part for fear of alarming
-her unduly; giving other reasons for the dear girl’s sudden descent on
-us, all more or less true.
-
-My good sister was as sympathetic as usual, only she entreated me to be
-sure I was really serious and in earnest this time.
-
-“You know, Vincent,” she said, “you have so often come moaning to me
-about young ladies, and I have so often asked them to tea and taken them
-to dances for you, and nothing whatever has come of it.”
-
-“But that hasn’t been my fault,” I answered. “I have simply got tired of
-them, that’s all. This time I am really in earnest.”
-
-“So you always were!” she laughed, “up to a certain point. Why, you’re a
-sort of a young lady-taster.”
-
-“Well,” I replied, “how are you to know what sort of cheese you like
-unless you taste several?”
-
-“Rather hard on the cheese, isn’t it? The process of tasting is apt to
-leave a mark.”
-
-“Oh, not in the hands of an adroit and respectable cheesemonger’s
-assistant.”
-
-“Vincent,” said my sister, severely, “don’t be cynical, or I’ll do
-nothing.”
-
-All the same, she knew what I said was true. Men would, I believe,
-always be faithful if only they could feel there was anything really to
-be faithful to. But they meet an angel at an evening party, and then,
-when they go to call, they find the angel fled and the most ordinary
-young person in her place; one scarcely capable of inspiring a
-school-boy in the fifth form to the mediocre height of the most ordinary
-verse-power.
-
-But with Lucy! Sympathetic readers don’t, I am sure, look for
-protestations from me where she’s concerned. At least, not now.
-
-The end of our talk was, it was arranged between us Lucy should go on
-board the _Amaranth_ in the morning and there remain.
-
-And the next morning there she was comfortably installed, and already
-looking forward to the Friday evening, when she was told we were going
-to make a move out of harbor, and probably go home by way of the Italian
-coast, and possibly by rail from Venice.
-
-Everything else was kept from her carefully, which is, I think, the
-worst of an adventure of this kind; one is driven to subterfuge even
-with those one loves best.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- ENTER MR. BAILEY THOMPSON—VAN GINKEL STANDS BY US—WE SHOW
- THOMPSON ROUND AND EXPLAIN DETAILS—TEDDY PARSONS’S ALARM
-
-
-THE Bailey Thompson problem confronted us _in propriâ personâ_ that very
-same afternoon, the Thursday, at about half-past four, when, as we were
-some of us sitting outside the Café de Paris at tea, I saw him strolling
-round the central flower-beds in front of the rooms. He wore one of the
-new soft straw hats, a black frock-coat, tan shoes, and the invariable
-dog-skin gloves, and over his arm he carried a plaid shawl. In short, he
-looked like what he was, Scotland Yard _en voyage_.
-
-I pointed him out to Brentin, who immediately jumped up, crossed the
-road, and greeted him with effusion. Then he brought him over and
-introduced him to our party, among whom, luckily enough, was seated Mr.
-Van Ginkel.
-
-Now I don’t want to say anything uncivil in print about a gentleman who
-rendered us later a service so undeniable, and, indeed, priceless; but I
-cannot help observing that Van Ginkel, on the whole, was one of the
-dreariest personalities I ever came in touch with.
-
-He was about Brentin’s age, fifty-four or so, but he appeared years
-older; his hair and beard were almost white, and his face was so lined,
-the flesh appeared folded, almost like linen. He had some digestive
-troubles that kept him to a milk diet, and he would sit in entire
-silence looking straight ahead of him, searching, as it were, for the
-point of time when he should be able to eat meat once more.
-
-Brentin had boarded the _Saratoga_ early that morning on its return, and
-given a full account of our scheme and its difficulties. Van Ginkel had
-listened in complete silence; and when Brentin had told him of Bailey
-Thompson, and our earnest desire to get him out of the way, ending by
-asking him to be so friendly as to take him on board and keep him there
-till we had finished, Van Ginkel had just remarked, “Why, certainly!”
-and relapsed into silence again.
-
-“He has very much altered,” Brentin had whispered, after presenting me;
-when Van Ginkel shook me by the hand, said “Mr. Vincent Blacker,” in the
-American manner, and was further entirely dumb. “He was the liveliest
-freshman of my class and the terror of the Boston young ladies,
-especially when he was full. As, of course, you know from his name, he
-is one of the oldest families of Noo York State.”
-
-“Yes,” I replied, “and he looks it.”
-
-Bailey Thompson sat with us for some little time outside the “Café de
-Paris,” and made himself uncommonly agreeable, according to his Scotland
-Yard lights. He told us, the hypocrite, he usually came to Monte Carlo
-at this time of the year, and usually stayed at the “Monte Carlo Hotel,”
-just where the road begins to descend to the Condamine, once Madame
-Blanc’s villa.
-
-Where were we? Oh! some of us were at the “Monopôle” and some on board
-the yacht. Really? Why, the “Monopôle” was the hotel he had recommended
-us, wasn’t it? He hoped we found it fairly quiet and comfortable, and
-not too dear, did the arch-hypocrite!
-
-When my sister rose to go back to the rooms and look after Miss Rybot,
-Van Ginkel roused himself to ask her to lunch with him the next day,
-Friday, on board the _Saratoga_, and go for a sail afterwards to
-Bordighera. He managed the affair like an artist, for he didn’t
-immediately include Bailey Thompson in the invitation, as though he knew
-too little of him just for the present. It was not till later, as we
-strolled down to the Condamine—he, Thompson, Brentin, and I—that he
-asked us to come on board the yacht and see over it, and not till
-finally as we were leaving that (as though reminding himself he must not
-be impolite) he begged the detective to be of the party, if he had no
-other engagement of the kind.
-
-Thompson—simple soul!—was enchanted to accept, and, as we went back on
-shore in the boat, went off into raptures at the beauty of the yacht and
-the politeness of the owner in asking him on so short an acquaintance.
-
-As we three strolled up the hill, Brentin, with the most natural air of
-trust, at once launched out on the subject of our plan.
-
-“Well, here we are, sir, you see,” he said; “everything is in train. We
-approach the hour.”
-
-“Here am I, too,” smiled the cool little man. “I told you I should most
-likely be over.”
-
-“We are real glad to see you.”
-
-“And you really mean it, now you’re on the spot and can measure some of
-the difficulties for yourselves?”
-
-“So much so that we have decided for Saturday night,” was Brentin’s
-light and untruthful reply. “We have observed the rooms are at their
-fullest then.”
-
-“Where are the rest of your party—the other gentlemen I saw at ‘The
-French Horn?’”
-
-“Mr. Hines is gambling, having unfortunately developed tastes in that
-direction. Mr. Masters is in attendance on a lady friend—”
-
-“The ladies of your party know nothing of your intentions, I presume?”
-said Thompson.
-
-“Nothing, sir; nothing. For them it is a mere party of pleasure all the
-time. Then Mr. Forsyth is playing that fool-game, tennis, with his late
-colonel, behind the “Hôtel de Paris,” and Mr. Parsons is somewhere way
-off on the Mentone Road, choking himself with dust on ay loaned
-bicycle.”
-
-“That’s the six of you. But now you have seen everything, do you really
-think six will be enough?”
-
-“Sir,” said Brentin, “six stalwarts of our crew have been confided in.
-They will be furnished with linen bags to collect the boodle, directly
-the tables are cleared of the croupiers and gamblers by us; in fact,
-acting on your kind hint, longshore suits have been provided them in
-which they have already rehearsed.”
-
-“Not in the rooms?”
-
-“Sir, they were there mid-day just before you came, and their behavior
-was as scroopulous as the late Lord Nelson’s.”
-
-“Was there any difficulty made about their cards?”
-
-“Why, none whatever. They went in in pairs, and each told a different
-lie: one pair were staying at the ‘Metropôle,’ another at the ‘de
-Paris,’ and another at the ‘S. James.’ They were well coached and they
-are brainy fellows. They were informed they must behave like ornaments
-of high-toned society, and not expectorate on the floor; and they
-paraded in couples, ejaculating _Haw, demmy!_”
-
-“Really!” murmured Bailey Thompson, “these people deserve to be raided.
-And that is your yacht, I suppose, lying off there—the _Amaranth_,
-isn’t it?”
-
-“That is the _Amaranth_, sir. At 9.30 to-morrow—I should say
-Saturday!—_Saturday_ night, she will have orders to get as close up to
-the shore as quickly as she can. If you will step this way, sir, down on
-to the terrace here, we will have pleasure in showing you the spot
-marked out by Nature and Providence for our retreat.”
-
-When we showed him the board with _défense d’entrée au public_ on it,
-the steps leading down on to the railway line, the broken piece of
-embankment, so few feet above the shore, Bailey Thompson gave a low
-whistle.
-
-“Lord! how simple it is,” he murmured. “Now you’d think people would
-take better care than that of property of such enormous value, wouldn’t
-you?”
-
-“Sir,” said Mr. Brentin, with magisterial emphasis, “in the simplicity
-of the idea lies its grandeur. It is significant of poor human nature to
-make difficulties for themselves; they neglect what lies at their feet,
-ready to be carted away for the trouble. Everybody has heard of the man
-who stood on your London Bridge offering sovereigns for a penny apiece,
-and doing no trade in them; while we all know the Boer children played
-for years with large diamonds, believing them to be white pebbles. Sir,
-it’s the same thing here precisely, and that’s all there is to it.”
-
-“I need hardly say, of course, that here there’s a good deal of risk,”
-said Thompson. “You have naturally all of you thought well over that?”
-
-“We have thought well over everything. If you care to attend the rooms
-on Saturday—_Saturday_ night—at about ten, you will see for yourself
-how complete in every respect our thought has been. And you will be
-amused, I fancy, at the little scene you will witness, in which I will
-undertake, Mr. Bailey Thompson, you shall be neither hurt nor hustled,”
-added Mr. Brentin, considerately.
-
-As we strolled back with Thompson to his hotel, I could, having some
-sort of gift that way, see quite well what was passing in his mind.
-
-After all, he said to himself, he was an English detective; why should
-he interfere to protect a French company who couldn’t look after
-themselves? Why, too, should he spoil gentlemen’s sport? They didn’t
-want the money for themselves; they wanted it (as we had always been
-careful to explain) for hospitals and good works generally. It wasn’t as
-if we were vulgar cracksmen, long firm swindlers, gentry he had been
-brought up to struggle with and defeat all his life. Hang it all! we
-were gentlemen and had treated him well, quite as one of ourselves. We
-had been frank and above-board, and had told him everything from the
-first.
-
-I could see it was on the tip of his tongue to blurt out: “Mr. Brentin
-and Mr. Blacker! you have been quite frank with me, and, at any cost, I
-will be quite frank with you. I am a detective from Scotland Yard, and
-unless you promise me to give up this scheme of yours—which, as Heaven
-shall judge me, will, I believe, be successful!—it will be my
-unpleasant duty to warn the police here and have you all arrested.”
-
-But there lay the difficulty, eh? We could scarcely be arrested for an
-idea, without overt act of any kind. Wouldn’t it be a complete answer if
-we declared the whole thing a practical joke, and turned the tables by
-laughing at him for being so simple as to believe it? No, if we were to
-be successfully caught, we must be caught in the act, that was clear.
-
-And then I felt the detective was too strong in him: the desire for the
-reward, the fame of such a capture; his professional pride, in short,
-bulked too large before him to be ignored.
-
-No! he said to himself, if we would go on with it, why we must take the
-consequences. For his part, he would go to the Principality police, arm
-a couple of dozen of them, and have them ready in the rooms. It would be
-a simple matter, for hadn’t we always told him our revolvers would not
-be loaded?
-
-When, after a long silence, he ended by shrugging his shoulders, I was
-as well aware of his resolve as though he had spoken it out loud.
-
-We left him at the door of his hotel, undertaking to meet him in the
-rooms at nine and show him every detail of our plan, so that we might
-have the benefit of his final advice on any possible weak points.
-
-“There is, of course, the chance,” I observed to Brentin, “of his going
-off at once to the police, and getting them to be present on Friday
-night as well, _ex majori cautelâ_.”
-
-“Oh, he won’t do that! We’ve told him no lies at present.”
-
-“None at any rate that he has discovered.”
-
-“The same thing!—and if we say Saturday, he probably believes we mean
-it. He won’t go to the police till the very last moment; he wouldn’t go
-then if only there were any way of managing the business by himself.”
-
-“And our ultimate arrest, now that he knows us all?”
-
-“Why, sir, that will be the affair of the authorities here; that is, of
-course, the chief risk we have now to run. My own notion, however,
-always has been that, if only for fear of advertising our success too
-widely, and suggesting the scheme to others, the Casino Company will put
-up with their loss, just as though we had legitimately won the boodle at
-play.”
-
-“Let us hope so!” I said, and parted from him with a warm grasp of the
-hand.
-
-Then I went down to the Condamine, and signalled for the _Amaranth_
-boat. We had left Lucy on board all day, for fear of her running up
-against Bailey Thompson on shore, and so arousing his suspicions by her
-presence. As for old Crage’s finding means to let him know what, in a
-fit of temper, he had blurted out, that I didn’t think altogether
-likely; in the first place, he would probably be afraid; and in the
-second, he would believe Lucy had by this time warned us and the whole
-affair was off. So I spent a very happy hour with dear Lucy on board,
-finding her sewing in a very bewitching tea-gown of my sister’s, and,
-going back to the hotel, discovered Teddy outside in a considerable
-state of alarm and excitement. He had just seen Thompson leaving the
-hotel, parting from Mrs. Wingham at the door.
-
-“Oh, Vincent!” he cried, “it’s not too late; we’d better hook it, we had
-really!”—and other terrified absurdities—the fact being, no doubt,
-that Thompson had merely come up to see the old lady and find out from
-her whether she knew if Saturday really was the day, or if we were by
-any chance trying to put him off the scent.
-
-I calmed Teddy with the assurance all was going on perfectly well, and
-that he had only to keep calm to do himself and his militia training
-full justice.
-
-“Hang it all!” I said to him, “you are as nearly as possible a British
-officer; do, for goodness’ sake, try and behave like one.”
-
-But he never did, from first to last; and for that, painful as it is, I
-feel myself obliged publicly to censure him here, in print.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
- EXIT MR. BAILEY THOMPSON
-
-
-FRIDAY dawned, blue and auspicious, and soon after twelve Brentin and I
-called at his hotel to conduct the luckless Thompson on board the
-_Saratoga_. We had matured our little plan, and as we went down the hill
-to the Condamine we began to put it in motion.
-
-In this wise. Brentin suddenly pulled up short, saying: “Sakes alive! I
-have forgotten to telegraph to the hotel at Venice to secure our rooms.
-Mr. Blacker, will you conduct our friend to the boat, and I will join
-you?”
-
-I went on with Thompson to the boat lying ready for us, and there we
-waited. Then at the top of the hill appeared Brentin, as per
-arrangement, outside the telegraph office, making weird signals with his
-arms.
-
-“What on earth is he doing?” I innocently asked.
-
-“He apparently wants you,” replied the unsuspicious Thompson; “perhaps
-he has forgotten the name of the hotel.”
-
-“Oh, Lord!” I ejaculated, “and I shall have to go all the way back up
-that horrible hill. Don’t you wait for me, please. If you don’t mind
-just going on board and sending the boat back, we shall be ready, and by
-that time Parsons and Hines will have joined us. We are a little too
-early as it is.”
-
-“The others come from the _Amaranth_, I presume?”
-
-“Yes; there’s the boat”—for we had arranged they should at any rate
-start, and not turn back till they had seen the detective decoyed below
-deck on board the _Saratoga_.
-
-“_Au revoir!_” I cried, and without turning, up the hill I hastened,
-only too delighted and relieved to hear the boat put off and the soft
-plash of the oars behind me.
-
-I never turned till I got to the telegraph office, and then Brentin and
-I stood there and watched with breathless interest. Brentin had glasses
-with him, and at once turned them on the _Saratoga_.
-
-“Van Ginkel receives him,” he chuckled, “with stately, old-fashioned
-courtesy. Thompson explains how it is he is alone, and that the boat is
-to go back for us. Van Ginkel insists on taking his plaid shawl, and
-entreats him to come below out of the sun. He leads the way, and they go
-to the head of the saloon companion-ladder, engaged in affable
-conversation and friendly rivalry for the shawl. They disappear. Bravo!
-The _Amaranth_ boat turns back. The _Saratoga_ men rapidly haul their
-own boat on board. The anchor is apparently already weighed. Animated
-figures cross and recross the deck. Orders are rapidly given—she’s off!
-By Heaven, sir, she’s off!”
-
-A long pause, while the shapely _Saratoga_ begins to leave the harbor
-and head for the open sea. She crosses the bows of the _Amaranth_, where
-the rest of our company are standing, with Captain Evans and his crew,
-waiting and watching.
-
-“Ah, ha!” roared Brentin, suddenly. “Thompson’s head reappears, without
-his hat. He looks round him, scared. He hurries to the captain, who is
-walking the bridge, his hands behind him, his eye watchful. He speaks to
-the captain. He shouts, he beats the bridge, he foams at the mouth. The
-captain pays him no heed—no heed, sir, whatever. He even casually steps
-on his fingers. Ha! he rushes to the man at the wheel. He gesticulates,
-he yells, he attempts to seize the wheel. Steady, Scotland Yard! You
-should know better than that. Bravo! The man at the wheel kicks a long
-leg out at him and shouts to the captain. The captain gives sharp,
-decisive orders. Bravo! Well done! Bailey Thompson is seized by a couple
-of Long Tom Coffins and hurried away. They hurry him, struggling
-violently, to the head of the companion-ladder. Down with him,
-gentlemen! Down with him, among the dead men! Bravo!”
-
-Bailey Thompson’s struggle and discomfiture were watched by our friends
-on the _Amaranth_ with interest at least as keen as ours. As the
-_Saratoga_ fell away across their bows, and Thompson disappeared down
-the companion-ladder, Captain Evans takes off his cap and leads his
-brave fellows to a cheer. They cheer vociferously and derisively, the
-ladies wave their handkerchiefs.
-
-“Exit Mr. Bailey Thompson!” cried Brentin, and taking off his hat he
-gave a loud “Hurray!” much to the astonishment of the man outside the
-telegraph office, who stands there with a tray of colored pince-nez for
-sale, as a protection against the Monte Carlo glare of white roads and
-blue sparkling sea.
-
-Just then up came Parsons and Hines.
-
-“Well, is it all right? Has he gone? Have they got him?”
-
-“Look for yourselves, gentlemen!” he cried, handing them the glass.
-“Search earth and sky for vestiges of Mr. Bailey Thompson, of Scotland
-Yard and Brixton. You will not find him. He has passed out of our ken.
-He’s on his way to Majorca, Minorca, Ivaca, and the Balearic Isles
-generally. For purposes of any active mischief he is as dead and
-harmless as the dodo.”
-
-“For the present—only for the present!” muttered Teddy, who was in his
-usual pallid condition.
-
-“And now,” said Brentin, with satisfaction, putting away his glasses,
-“rebellion being dead, let us go back to the ‘Monopôle,’ enjoy our
-breakfast, and pay our bill. Then we pack up and get our things on board
-the yacht. Fortune smiles on us, gentlemen,” he added, “as ever on the
-bold. Nothing, so far, could be better!”
-
-From the terrace of the “Monopôle” we took a last look over the sea
-before going in to breakfast. There was the _Saratoga_, rapidly growing
-diminutive as she bustled far away out to sea to the right. Exit Mr.
-Bailey Thompson, indeed!
-
-Mrs. Wingham’s place, between Mrs. Sellars and Miss Marter, was empty.
-They told Teddy the old lady had breakfasted early, and was down at the
-rooms for a long afternoon’s play.
-
-And Mr. Parsons was leaving? How sorry they were—how much they would
-miss him! Certainly they would say good-bye to Mrs. Wingham for him. Oh,
-we were all going to Bordighera in a friend’s yacht, and should most
-probably not return. Well, good-bye. _Bon voyage!_
-
-“Now she’ll think,” said the sagacious Teddy, as he joined us, “the
-whole affair’s off, notwithstanding my telling her it was fixed for
-Saturday. She’ll fancy we’ve got frightened, or been warned, and have
-bolted. Good business!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
- THE GREAT NIGHT—DINNER AT THE “HÔTEL DE PARIS”—A LAST LOOK ROUND
- —THE SACK AND ITS INCIDENTS—FLIGHT
-
-
-BY five o’clock of that same afternoon—Friday, January 17th—we and our
-luggage were all safe on board the _Amaranth_.
-
-Our luggage stowed away and our cabin arrangements made (rather a tight
-fit we found it), I took Lucy on shore to show her round, or give her a
-walk rather, as it was nearly dark; for now that Bailey Thompson was
-well out at sea, there was no danger of her being met and recognized.
-For the night, our plan of action briefly was, that at a quarter to
-eight we were all to dine together at the “Hôtel de Paris,” the ladies
-afterwards to return on board the yacht. At ten we gentlemen, with the
-six sailors, were to be in the rooms; at half-past, precisely, the start
-was to be made.
-
-At ten-twenty the boats, two of them, were to leave the yacht and be
-ready at the spot I have indicated. They were not to start a minute
-earlier, for fear of exciting suspicions among any of the firemen or
-police who might be about on the terrace. For them, on Brentin’s
-suggestion, we had arranged a small pyrotechnic display—what he called
-“fire-crackers”—on the terrace not far from the band-stand. Parsons had
-purchased a “Devil among the Tailors” over at Mentone, and Jarvis, one
-of the sailors—the same, by-the-way, who had first accosted us on the
-pier at Ryde—was to light it one minute before the half-hour. We
-calculated it would explode and draw the firemen away, just about the
-time when they would otherwise be in demand to stop us in our rush down
-the terrace steps, and through the rickety gate on to the railway line.
-
-Our dinner at the “Hôtel de Paris” was a very expensive and merry one.
-It was lucky, by-the-way, as it turned out, that I ate and drank a good
-deal more than usual, for it was almost four-and-twenty hours before I
-got anything approaching a proper meal again; through that idiot Teddy
-Parsons’ fault, as presently will plainly enough appear.
-
-Soon after half-past nine we sent the ladies off in a carriage down to
-the Condamine to go on board the yacht. It was a solemn moment, for it
-was quite on the cards I might never see any of them again, and one was
-my sweetheart and one my sister. Indeed, so affected was I, that I bent
-into the carriage and kissed Miss Rybot by mistake, which made everybody
-but Arthur Masters laugh. I knew I had made the mistake directly my lips
-touched her cheek, for hers was hard and cold as an apple off wet grass,
-whereas dear Lucy’s was ever soft and warm as a sunny peach.
-
-Then they drove away, laughing and kissing their hands; Lucy
-particularly merry, for she still knew nothing of what we were almost
-immediately going to do, and was quite gay at the thought of leaving
-Monte Carlo so soon—to which unhallowed spot, as most good and
-sensitive women, she had taken the supremest dislike.
-
-We gentlemen sat a little time smoking, in somewhat perturbed silence,
-and just before ten we had a glass of old brandy each, paid our bill,
-and left. The others went on into the rooms, while Brentin and I walked
-down on to the terrace to have a last look at the gate, and see it was
-still open; or, rather, would open to a slight push.
-
-The night was singularly mild, dark, and heavy; the terrace absolutely
-deserted. There was not a star in the dense, low sky; they all seemed
-fallen on shore, outlining the Condamine and heights of Monaco in the
-many regular pin-pricks of the gas-lamps. From the “Café de Paris” came
-the swirl of the Hungarian band; from the Casino concert-room, the high
-notes of Madame Eames singing in the new opera; from the Condamine, the
-jingle of the omnibus bells. Not another sound of life from earth or
-heaven; but mainly the persistent jangle of those omnibus bells, as
-though sadly shaken by some dyspeptic Folly. The Mediterranean, as ever,
-was absolutely still.
-
-I could have stayed there a long time, but—
-
-“Come!” whispered Brentin, and taking my arm, walked me back up the
-steps towards the rooms. As we passed the end of the concert-room, I
-noticed that up against the outside balconies, at the back of the stage,
-ladders were reared, so that, in case of fire, the artistes might have
-some other chance of escape than the dubious one of fighting their way
-through the _salle_. I found myself fitfully wondering whether those
-ladders would be used.
-
-“Come!” whispered Brentin, again, feeling, I dare say, the alarm in my
-elbow. “Courage!”
-
-For I do not mind confessing here in print that, as the hour approached,
-I began to feel frightened at the audacity of what we were going to do,
-and, if only I could—consistently with my honor—would willingly have
-withdrawn; nay, to put it plainly, turned tail and bolted. My revolver,
-loaded with blank cartridge only, in the pocket of my smoking-jacket
-beat remindfully against my hip as I walked up the Casino steps. Even
-now as I write, months after the occurrence, the tremor of that hour
-seizes me and my hand shakes so I can scarcely guide the pen.
-
-Another moment, and we had walked through the hall, and passed the
-swing-doors into the stifling gambling-rooms.
-
-It is extremely unlikely I ever visit Monte Carlo again; indeed, my
-conduct, on this the last occasion I entered the rooms, rather precludes
-me from ever even making the attempt; but if ever I do, they will never
-make the same impression on me as they did that warm January evening
-when Brentin and I strolled into them arm in arm.
-
-Every incident of that memorable evening, every face I then saw, is
-photographed into my memory, still remains there distinct and indelible.
-The rooms, either because of the attraction of a new opera or because
-the night was so warm, were somewhat empty. The crowds were only round
-the table, and the parquet flooring between looked more than usually
-vacant and dull.
-
-Dimmer they looked, too, and more than ever badly lit; and the air
-seemed even heavier charged with gamblers’ exasperation.
-
-Now, in some slight particulars, we had modified our original plan. We
-had long given over all attempt to turn the light out, for one thing,
-since we had never been able to discover where the mains were; probably
-somewhere well out of sight, down below among the vaults, which also we
-had decided not to attempt. Nor did we intend to do anything towards
-securing the gamblers’ valuables, as at one time we had projected. It
-was very like vulgar robbery, to begin with, and next, as Thompson had
-pointed out, it would take too much time.
-
-Directly we got inside, Brentin looked up at the clock over the door and
-set his watch by it; then we strolled off to find the rest, and, showing
-each of them the watch, saw that each had the precise time. Our six
-sailors were wandering about genteelly in pairs; to each Brentin
-whispered, “Got your bag all right?” and each nodded a reply. Each had a
-linen bag buttoned inside his short, respectable reefer jacket. One who,
-I fear, was not quite sober, a man named Barker, took his bag out with a
-stupid laugh to show us; whereupon his companion (Frank Joyce, from
-Sandown, in the Isle of Wight, who had him by the arm) said, “Now then,
-Barker, don’t be a fool, it ain’t time yet.”
-
-It was then between the ten minutes and the quarter past ten.
-
-When we had visited the rooms with Bailey Thompson the night before, and
-explained our plan in detail on the spot, we had, by his advice, and
-very wisely, reversed it. Previously, we had designed to begin at the
-first, the _roulette_ tables, and drive the people gradually before us
-into the last room, towards the _trente-et-quarante_; but that, as he
-pointed out, would force us to work with our backs to the exit and bring
-us between two fires as it were; whereas, if we began in the farthest
-rooms and cleared the _trente-et-quarante_ tables first, we should have
-our faces to the doors, and, by driving everybody before us, secure the
-further advantage of increasing the confusion that would arise from the
-people rushing in to see what was wrong and meeting the people rushing
-out. And through that surging, terrified mass we ought to have no
-difficulty in forcing a passage, if only we kept our unloaded revolvers
-up to the mark and frowned unflinchingly.
-
-As for masking ourselves, which we had also at first designed, Thompson
-was strongly against it; it would all take time, and might only obscure
-our vision; for, as he truly pointed out, that sort of thing scarcely
-ever fits properly.... I gave a nervous glance at my watch, and found it
-nearly ten-twenty.
-
-I was standing just by the last _roulette_ table, and saw one or two
-little things that, as I have said, are still distinctly photographed in
-my memory. There were two young men standing behind me, and one said,
-“I’ll just chuck a louis on the table and see where it will fall.” It
-fell on the number eighteen, and eighteen actually turned up! He laughed
-excitedly as the croupier pushed him thirty-five times his stake.
-“That’s not bad for my one gentle little louis, eh?” he giggled.
-
-Opposite, a brown-faced English yachtsman, over from Mentone, was
-steadily backing the colors with notes of five hundred francs. He was
-always right; he changed from side to side, and always hit the right red
-or black. He was watched by two common Englishmen, with long upper lips
-and ridiculous pantaloon beards, dressed in shiny broadcloth. “That
-feller’s won another twenty-pound,” said one of them, gaping. “We must
-bring Louisa in to see this.”
-
-Now it was past the ten-twenty, and I moved off into the
-_trente-et-quarante_ rooms.
-
-Every one who has been to Monte Carlo knows that the four
-_trente-et-quarante_ tables are in the two end rooms, two in each.
-
-In the right-hand room were to be stationed Brentin, Parsons, and I,
-with three of the sailors; in the left, Forsyth, Masters, and Hines,
-with the other three. Brentin was to give the signal in our
-room—“_Levez les mains!_”—and Hines in the other, while the immediate
-discharge of the “Devil among the Tailors” outside on the terrace would,
-we hoped, increase the confusion and alarm within. It was rather awkward
-that we were forced to go to work a little out of sight of each other;
-for, though there is an opening between the rooms, we meant to begin
-well at the back, and the opening did not so far reach as to bring us in
-sight of each other.
-
-It was close on the twenty-five minutes past ten, and so alarmed was I
-at the difficulties which, now we were actually on the spot ready to
-overcome them, loomed so desperately large, that I would willingly have
-sacrificed half my income to be allowed to leave without even making the
-attempt.
-
-On one side of me was Brentin; on the other a very pretty, smart young
-Englishwoman, standing with a purse in her hand, watching the run on
-black. As in a dream, I noticed all the details of her dress, the white
-facings of her dark jacket on the cuffs and pockets, the piquant spots
-on her veil. Quietly, as though she were paying for a pair of gloves,
-she staked all the gold she had left, about twenty pounds, and lost
-that. She searched her purse, found it quite empty, snapped it
-leisurely, and sauntered away. Brentin whispered me he had seen her
-stake roll after roll of notes, and lose them all. Beautifully dressed,
-with a hanging, jewelled little watch and many neat gold bracelets, I
-had often seen her strolling about the gardens, neither speaking to nor
-looking at any one; now I found myself stupidly wondering who she was,
-even envying her, notwithstanding her totally cleaned-out condition.
-
-The relentless minutes stole on. I looked piteously at Brentin, glaring
-with resolution straight in front of him, his hand in his pocket
-fingering his revolver; at Parsons, white as this paper, his legs
-bending under him.
-
-Piteously I looked at the table in front of me; at the croupiers, with
-their cropped black heads and emotionless faces; at the _chef_ sitting
-above them, his bored, round back towards me; at the delicately pretty,
-demure Italian, olive-skinned and colorless, leaning her arm, in its
-long white glove, over the back of his chair; at the young Frenchman
-staking his thousand-franc notes, his forehead and eyes twitching with
-excitement, or some nervous complaint; at the gaunt English girl—
-
-_Bang!_ from the terrace outside. _Bang! bang!_
-
-I gave a jump like a terrified horse. It was the “Devil among the
-Tailors,” set off a minute or two too soon by our friend and accomplice,
-the sailor.
-
-The confusion and alarm it caused was nothing compared to what followed.
-I had just time to see the Italian lady’s frightened profile, as she
-turned and put her white glove up to her smooth cheek, when the bold
-Brentin gave a hoarse shout—“_Levez les mains!_”—and produced the
-revolver. Then, indeed, a panic set in! comparable, I imagine, to
-nothing but the sudden striking of a ship.
-
-At first a dead pause, and then immediately a rushing to and fro, as of
-rats in a pit, the haggard looking in each other’s fallen, discomposed
-faces. And then the noise! the overthrow of chairs and the dragging of
-them along the parquet floor, caught in screaming women’s dresses as
-they scudded away like sea-shore birds, bent low, with their hands up to
-their ears, while the shouting, swearing, groaning men clutched at their
-money, and tried to thrust it in their pockets, as they leaped and
-huddled themselves away, the louis falling and tinkling on the floor.
-
-I saw before me a hideous, moving frieze of terror, of distorted
-faces—Russian, French, German, Italian, English, American, Greek—all
-reduced to the same monotony of look under the overmastering influence
-of the same passion—abject fear. The English were no better than the
-rest; they were a little quicker in getting away, perhaps, and that was
-all. The confusion of tongues was as complete as though, on the Tower of
-Babel, some one had screamed the foundations were giving way, and all
-must save themselves as best they could.
-
-As in a battle the soldier knows only incidents, the faces he sees as
-frightened or determined as his own, the eyes peering into his through
-smoke he mostly himself seems to make; so, out of this action—so famous
-and yet so little known—can I only report the events that met me in my
-narrow section of the struggle, a section drawn almost in parallel
-straight lines from the point I started at to the point of exit at the
-farther end of the rooms.
-
-First it was the _chef_, on his high chair facing me, who fell over
-backwards, ridiculous enough at such a time of tragic import. One of the
-croupiers, in jumping horrified to his feet, gave him a tilt and over he
-went. He was a youngish man, with round, fat, clean-shaven cheeks, and a
-small, bristling, black mustache. His arms and legs waved and kicked
-like an impaled insect; his mouth opened with a stupendous screaming
-oath, and as he fell—strange how at all times one notices details!—I
-saw he wore half-shoes and blue socks.
-
-In another minute we were at the vacant table, the _chef_ crawling away
-under a sofa-seat against the wall, and two of our gallant sailors were
-stuffing the notes and coins into their linen bags. The second table was
-equally deserted, and there the not-quite-sober sailor, Barker, with
-empty, delighted laughter, was already scratching the notes out of the
-metal stand they are always kept in. Suddenly I saw he nearly fell; some
-one under the table had him by the leg. He clutched the _chef’s_ empty
-high chair, and, with a mighty oath and mighty random kick, released
-himself.
-
-“Hurry up, men! hurry up!” chanted Brentin, as we moved forward
-irresistibly over the bare floor.
-
-_Bang!_ suddenly went Teddy’s revolver off, in his nervousness, close to
-my ear. It was a mistake, but not altogether a disastrous one; it showed
-we were in earnest, and soon cleared some of the people away from the
-space between the roulette rooms and the _trente-et-quarante_. Like a
-wave that breaks against the shore and then returns, so these broken
-people, spent against the struggling mass round the swing-doors, had
-gushed back again and almost reached the point they started from.
-
-From the room on the left, where Hines and his party were at work, I
-suddenly heard Arthur Masters shout, “Look out, Forsyth!” At what, I
-know not; I just gave a look in their direction, and their room seemed
-as vacant of opposition as ours.
-
-“Forward!” cried Brentin. “Hurry up! hurry up!”
-
-The sailors, with their bags, fell behind us, and forward we three
-charged. As we came through the sort of ante-chamber dividing the rooms,
-there, through the other door, at the same moment, came Hines, Forsyth,
-and Masters, hurrying.
-
-“Bravo!” screamed to them the excited Brentin. “The left-hand table,
-gentlemen!”
-
-Right and left the tables were absolutely deserted. As the sailors
-pounced on and proceeded to clear them, I had an unobstructed view down
-the length of the remaining rooms right to the exit.
-
-Such a scene of terrified, shouting, screaming confusion I never saw;
-nor ever shall, unless my lurid evil star should one day carry me into
-the hot heart of a theatre-panic, the uncontrollable frenzied meeting of
-a fighting pit, gallery, dress circle, and stalls. They say a man will
-give all he hath for his life, and here were innumerable men and women,
-believing their precious lives in peril, giving all their fiery energies
-play in their efforts to best their neighbor and reach the door. Often,
-by-the-way, as I have heard of people wringing their hands, this was the
-only occasion on which I ever really saw it done. One of the footmen, in
-his absurd, ill-fitting livery, was standing on one of the side sofas, a
-chap with laughable long whiskers, a discolored beak of a nose, and a
-rabbit mouth; there he stood, dancing up and down, his face all puckered
-with terror, actually wringing his hands in his misfitting long sleeves.
-Then he suddenly fell over and crawled away, yelping like a frightened
-lap-dog, and for the life of me I couldn’t help a spirit of laughter.
-
-“Gracious!” yelled Brentin, above the indescribable din, “I hope no one
-will be injured. Loose off your gun, friend Parsons.”
-
-_Bang!_ went Teddy’s revolver. I looked at him; his face was still dead
-white, while his mouth was working and distorted with a dreadful grin.
-_Bang!_ it went again, while Teddy gave a silly laugh. Like a shot in a
-mine that clears the air, or like the blowing out of a candle at ten
-paces, the blank discharge had its due effect. The tortured mass heaved
-and groaned, yielding irresistibly to the pressure of their terrors;
-irresistibly they began to pour and gush out through the swing-doors at
-the end. Every second, so fast they went, our road to safety was notably
-being cleared for us.
-
-“Forward! Forward!” Brentin sang.
-
-To the right we went again into the next room, in the same
-irreproachable order, with the same sublime results. Arthur Masters, in
-all the energetic glory of battle, was waving his revolver, trying to
-crack it, beating it against his thigh, as though it were a whip,
-cheering on his men like hounds. He is master, as I have mentioned, of a
-pack of harriers in Hertfordshire, and all the time he was at work in
-the last two rooms he was musically crying, “Melody! Harmony! Trixie!
-Hie over, lass, hie over!” And once, as one of his sailors bent on the
-floor over a few scattered louis, he roared at him, “’Ware trash!” When
-safe in England, I told him of it afterwards. He laughed and declared he
-hadn’t the slightest recollection of doing anything of the sort.
-
-Now will it be believed that, so universal was the panic, at one of the
-tables only, at the bottom one in the room before the last, was there
-anybody found to receive us! And that not so much, I fancy, in the
-spirit of opposition as of curiosity, or perhaps inability to move.
-
-For there we found an English lady tranquilly seated—elderly, perhaps
-sixty, with a shrewd, not unpleasant face. To this day I don’t know her
-name, but I know her quite well by sight, having often seen her driving
-in Piccadilly and Bond Street. At the back of her chair her husband was
-standing, eye-glass in eye; a tall man with a large head, rather of the
-empty House of Commons air of importance, coolly watching us.
-
-“You will be good enough not to touch this lady’s money,” he said, as
-our men pounced on the table. Then, as a sort of after-thought, he
-added, “You ought to be ashamed of yourselves.”
-
-“Write to the _Times_,” chuckled Brentin, impudently.
-
-The old lady looked hard at me, as much as to say, “I’ve seen _you_
-somewhere before, more respectably engaged than this.”
-
-And, before I forget, it is an odd thing that, only a week or so ago, I
-again met her driving in Piccadilly; I was in a cab with Lucy, and we
-met her victoria face to face. We stood side by side for quite three
-minutes in a block, and she recognized and stared at me in astonishment.
-I returned her stare, not rudely, I hope, and then positively couldn’t
-help beginning to laugh; she didn’t laugh back, but I could see quite
-well she was very near it.
-
-There still remained the end room of all and our exit through the doors.
-Now was the time for all our nerve, all our resource.
-
-Breathlessly, I glanced up at the clock, and saw it was just over the
-twenty-five minutes to eleven. We had taken only some six or seven
-minutes to clear eleven tables; there still remained the two last and
-our rush for the yacht.
-
-Our friends on the left hurried up to us, we having been slightly
-quicker on the right; and then, strangely enough, there was a moment’s
-dead silence, at any rate, in the rooms. In the pause we could hear the
-dull, frightened roar from the hall outside, and then, suddenly and
-faintly, the short, sharp, defiant call of a bugle.
-
-The gamblers and croupiers, still massed struggling round the exit,
-turned, many of them as though by an understanding, and faced us, some
-of them even crying “_Silence!_” “_Silence!_” The valets, clambering on
-the side seats, leaned towards us expectantly. It seemed as though they
-were looking for us to make them a speech, some kind of an apology for
-our inexplicable and outrageous conduct. It was a sort of “Gentlemen of
-the French Guard, fire first!” and though I don’t suppose it lasted more
-than a second, it seemed an age.
-
-Then Brentin stepped forward, and sweeping his revolver along the line
-of their expectant faces, said in his ordinary voice—and all the more
-authoritative and effective it sounded—“_Retirez-vous!_”
-
-My gaze was fixed on a tall croupier, a man I had often seen walking
-about in a straw-hat with his little daughter; indeed, once I had
-stopped and kissed the child, she was so pretty. Then he had been
-delighted; now he was staring at me with hard, frightened eyes, grinding
-his teeth.
-
-As Brentin stepped forward, we stepped forward too.
-
-“Close up behind us, you men!” Masters called to the sailors. “Use your
-fists if they try to stop you!”
-
-Instantly the screaming and shouting began again. As we moved briskly
-and irresistibly forward, the seething crowd at the swing-doors melted
-away before us like wax before the fire. Men and women began to steal
-behind us and run back frantically into the vacant rooms we had just
-stripped and left.
-
-“_Retirez-vous!_” cried Brentin, in a higher key.
-
-I kept my eye on the tall croupier, clearly meditating mischief, and
-then suddenly covered him with my unloaded revolver. His face fell like
-a shutter; all at once he seemed to be struck imbecile. Death was
-staring at him, he fancied, down the stubborn, steel tube—death! and he
-had never made his _salut_—would die in the gambling-rooms! He fell
-back with the rest, using his elbows viciously, and out we went with a
-rush, like uncorked soda-water opened by an unskilful hand at a picnic.
-
-An arm reached out at me from behind the door as I darted through, and
-caught my coat. I gave myself a vigorous wrench and swore (the first and
-only time that night), while my pocket came tearing off in the villain’s
-grasp. He was very welcome to it, if only as a souvenir.
-
-The hall was pretty empty, for most people who had escaped from the
-rooms had rushed wildly out into the night, in their terror. When the
-“Devil among the Tailors” first went off on the terrace, there had been
-shouts and cries of “_Les Anarchistes!_” and all who heard it thought
-the building was about to be blown to atoms with a bomb, and flew, like
-sand before the wind.
-
-Still, numbers were beginning to pour into the far end of the hall out
-from the concert-room, where the alarm was just spreading and playing
-the deuce with the new opera. As we ran through and down the steps to
-the right, I could hear the band still playing and some one singing.
-Then, evidently, the alarm reached the instrumentalists, for they
-stopped suddenly with a wheeze, like a musical box run down.
-
-Down the steps we rushed, knocking some few of both sexes, I am ashamed
-to say, over and aside in our stride. Out of the watchful corner of my
-right eye I saw the waiters come running out of the “Café de Paris,” in
-their white aprons.
-
-Outside, as we turned the corner of the building, to the left down on to
-the terrace, one or two firemen came bounding up the steps to meet us.
-One of them faced us, holding out his arms and saying something in
-French I didn’t catch.
-
-It was addressed to Barker, whose only reply was to grunt and knock the
-man head over heels into a heap of cactus. Hating violence as I do, I am
-pleased to report it was absolutely the only blow struck the whole time,
-and was a singularly efficient one.
-
-At the bottom of the steps to the right we darted, so close together we
-might have been almost covered with a pocket-handkerchief, of the larger
-Derby-winner type.
-
-“Get in front, you men!” panted Brentin, in a sibilant whisper. “Take
-the first boat, this way!”
-
-The sailors plunged in front as Brentin pulled the gate open. Down the
-steps they clattered. One of them, as he passed me, I saw was trying to
-tie the tape round the neck of his linen bag with his teeth.
-
-And now furious steps were rushing after us over the gravel of the
-terrace; menacing dark figures, many of them, were making for our gate.
-
-“Give ’em a fusillade!” hissed Hines, and turning we fired, each of us,
-pretty nearly the whole of our six blank barrels.
-
-From that moment our retreat, which had hitherto been conducted in such
-beautiful order, became as loose and streaming as the tail of a comet.
-As for me, I fired most of my six barrels as I ran down the steps,
-straight over my head, anywhere. I can feel now the soft kick of my
-revolver as I held it loosely in my left hand.
-
-Now I don’t know it is exactly to my credit, but it certainly says
-something for my physical condition, that I was first down. I plunged
-panting across the railway lines, and simply hurled myself down the
-embankment, on to the shore.
-
-The first boat with the sailors already in it, the boodle in its linen
-bags gleaming ghostily in a tumbled heap at the bottom, was just pushing
-off. I tore through the water up to my waist, and they soon had me on
-board, pulling me in excitedly by the arms. The night was so dark that,
-a dozen strokes from the shore, there was nothing to be seen but the
-yacht’s lights, fifty yards ahead. We flew over the water, the men
-talking, swearing, panting, and helping one another push at the oars. We
-were alongside almost immediately, and I was the first up on deck.
-
-“All safe, sir?” cried the captain, as I swung myself up.
-
-“Get her ready,” I panted, “the others will be here in a minute.”
-
-“Aye, aye, sir!”
-
-My sister ran up and kissed me. Miss Rybot was standing at the taffrail,
-glaring like a young eagle over the black water, and drumming her
-fingers on the rail. A few heavy raindrops were beginning to fall.
-
-“Where’s Lucy?”
-
-“We sent her below; she’s reading a book.”
-
-I paused to listen for the other boat, and could hear the tearing of the
-oars, the thud of the rowlocks. Away down from Monaco came the stern and
-menacing beat of a drum. Through the open lighted windows of the Casino
-concert-room I could see dark figures preparing to descend the ladders I
-had noticed considerately placed there against the balconies.
-
-And then, suddenly, for the first time since we had been aboard, just as
-the other boat came tearing alongside and I stumbled off breathlessly
-below, it began to rain in earnest, a seething, hissing downpour; what
-my old Derbyshire nurse used picturesquely to call, _whole water_.
-
-By the time I reached Lucy’s cabin door we were well under weigh,
-shouldering our way swiftly and sturdily through the still, wet night.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
- WE DISCOVER TEDDY PARSONS IS LEFT BEHIND—I MAKE UP MY MIND—TO
- THE RESCUE!—UNMANLY CONDUCT OF THE OTHERS—I GO ALONE—DISGUISE
- —THE GARDE CHAMPÊTRE
-
-
-“IT’S all over!” I cried to Lucy, as I stumbled in; “we’ve done it
-beautifully! We’re all safe, without a scratch!”
-
-And then, so overwrought was I with the long tension, I became quite
-hysterical.
-
-I went off into a fit of laughter, and at last, with the silly, happy
-tears chasing one another like sheep down my face, I managed to tell her
-she was free now to go back to Wharton Park with her father and
-grandmother, that Bob Hines would have his swimming-bath and gymnasium,
-that the ho-ho-hospitals would all open their closed wards again, and
-Teddy Parsons breathe freely once more before his fierce old governor,
-the colonel, at Southport.
-
-“It was my idea!” I cried, “and we’ve done it with the greatest ease—I
-knew we should!—and we’re all safe; and oh, Lucy! do just come into the
-saloon and see how much we’ve got. It was my own idea, and the fools all
-said it was impossible, and just look how simple it’s been, after all!
-Why, we must have carried off sixty thousand pounds, at least!”
-
-Lucy seemed scarcely to understand what I was talking about; but she saw
-I was safe, and, feeling the yacht well under weigh, cared for very
-little else; so she held my hand and soothed and calmed me, and then
-followed with obedient laughter as I almost dragged her into the saloon.
-
-There, neatly piled under the electric light on the table, lay the linen
-bags, for all the world like the letter-bags in a mail-train; and there
-was Brentin, with wet hair and tie all on one side, beginning to empty
-them and arrange notes and gold in separate heaps. The silver was a
-little deficient, for we had given the sailors orders more or less to
-ignore the five-franc pieces.
-
-Of the gallant band, Hines and Forsyth were lying on the sofas with
-closed eyes, still slightly panting; my sister was looking on, leaning
-up against one of the pillars, where Miss Rybot, seated at the table,
-was unfolding the notes with her long, slim fingers, and arranging them
-in bundles according to their respective values. She was doing it with
-the greatest coolness, and, for some reason, a rather more haughty air
-of displeasure than usual.
-
-“Well, Master Vincent,” said Brentin, looking up at me with grim joy,
-“here we all are, and here is the boodle. Come and help count.”
-
-At that moment in came Masters. It appears he had fallen, getting down
-off the railway line, and muddied his trousers; he had been changing
-them, not caring to appear before his young lady with dirty knees.
-
-Hines and Forsyth roused themselves, and, almost in silence, we sat down
-to count; not a sound but a step or two on deck overhead and the throb
-of the engines, the luxurious rustle of notes, the pleasing chink of
-gold.
-
-Suddenly my sister said, “Where’s Mr. Parsons?”
-
-Miss Rybot murmured, “Two hundred and forty-seven thousand-franc notes.”
-
-I looked round the saloon. “Yes, by-the-way, where’s Teddy?”
-
-There was no answer, and Brentin stopped emptying the last bag. “In his
-cabin, probably,” he said, carelessly.
-
-“No, he’s not,” replied Masters, who shared it with him.
-
-“He came in your boat,” said Brentin, looking across at me, startled.
-
-“Indeed, he didn’t!”
-
-There was dead silence while for a moment we looked in each other’s
-frightened faces.
-
-Then I got up and left the saloon. Outside I shouted for him; no answer.
-
-I hurried on deck to find the captain; it was still raining hard, and
-the captain was in his shelter up on the bridge. The light from the
-binnacle struck up on the resolute face of Joyce at the wheel.
-
-“Captain Evans!”
-
-“Sir!”
-
-“Did you see Mr. Parsons come on board?”
-
-“Can’t say I particularly noticed him, sir.”
-
-“Joyce, did you?”
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-“He wasn’t in our boat, was he?”
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-“Who rowed the second boat?”
-
-“Bramber and Meikle, sir.”
-
-I hurried away and at last found them in the galley with the cook,
-eating a surreptitious supper, with tin plates on their knees.
-
-“Who came in the boat with you men?” I asked.
-
-“Mr. Brentin, Mr. Masters, Mr. Hines, and Mr. Forsyth,” said Bramber,
-with his mouth full.
-
-“That’s right!” said Meikle.
-
-“You saw nothing of Mr. Parsons?”
-
-“No, sir; we thought he was with you.”
-
-I stumbled down the companion and almost fell into the saloon. They had
-stopped counting and looked up at me anxiously. “Well?”
-
-“He’s not on board!”
-
-“Sakes alive!” murmured Brentin. “That’s awkward!—for Mr. Parsons,” he
-considerately added.
-
-My sister said “Good gracious, Vincent!” while with her silver pencil
-Miss Rybot began to draw poor Teddy’s insignificant profile on the back
-of one of the thousand-franc notes.
-
-I took a perturbed turn or two up and down the saloon.
-
-“He can’t have fallen overboard?” ventured Masters.
-
-“How could he, if he didn’t even come off in either of the boats?” some
-one replied.
-
-There was another pause, and then I asked:
-
-“How closely were you followed?”
-
-“Why, not at all,” said Brentin. “After we loosed off the guns they all
-ran back.”
-
-“Did anybody see Teddy after we got down the steps?”
-
-Nobody answered. The fact was, I fear, we were all too busy looking
-after ourselves to look after any one else.
-
-“He may have fallen crossing the line. Did anybody notice whether any
-one fell?”
-
-Silence again. Then, with vague emphasis, Brentin said:
-
-“Depend upon it, Mr. Parsons is ay gentleman of so much resource that,
-wherever he is, he may safely be left to extricate himself from
-embarrassment. Let us resoom the counting.”
-
-I looked at him reproachfully.
-
-“Mr. Brentin, it was agreed we stood by each other, I believe?”
-
-“You were the first to get ahead, sir,” he replied, with what was meant
-for withering sarcasm, “and be off in the wrong boat.”
-
-“Because I understood we were all safe.”
-
-“So we were. So, no doubt, is Mr. Parsons.”
-
-“And if at this moment he is in the hands of the police?”
-
-The base Brentin shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“_Tong pee pour louee_,” he said, in New York French. “Gentlemen, let us
-resoom the counting.”
-
-“No!” I cried, banging the table, “not till we have decided what is to
-be done.”
-
-Brentin frowned and looked across at me sourly. I couldn’t have believed
-success would so utterly change a man; but so it often is.
-
-“Good chap, Teddy Parsons,” murmured Forsyth. “I’m sorry.”
-
-“I do not know, sir,” scowled Brentin, “whether you propose to imperil
-the safety of five gentlemen, three elegant and refined ladies, and—”
-
-“Was it, or was it not, understood we stood by each other?” I cried,
-impatiently. “See here, you fellows, you can’t be seriously thinking of
-leaving that poor little snipe in the lurch like this?”
-
-“Parsons never was any particular friend of mine,” growled Hines.
-
-“Besides, I expect he’s all right,” said Masters, evasively. “He knows
-people over at Mentone; he’ll be off over there, you bet.”
-
-“Don’t you excite yourself, old boy,” murmured Forsyth. “Parsons is one
-of the cleverest chaps I know. He’ll get out of it all right, you take
-your oath. Besides, we can scarcely turn back now.”
-
-“Turn back!” snarled Brentin. “This vessel is mine and under my orders.
-There will be no turning back, except over my dead body; and that’s all
-there is to it! Come, gentlemen,” he cried, impatiently, “resoom the
-counting.”
-
-And such was their incredible baseness that they actually began counting
-again, just as though poor Teddy Parsons had never been born. Only the
-ladies looked shocked, while Lucy kept her frightened eyes fixed on my
-face. As for me, my mind was soon made up.
-
-“Well,” I said, resolutely, “if you won’t any of you come, I shall go
-back alone.”
-
-“What’s the matter with walking on the waters?” sneered Brentin.
-
-“In a few moments,” I continued, “we shall be off Cap Martin. Mr.
-Brentin, you will be good enough to give orders to have me put ashore
-there.”
-
-“Aye, aye, sir!” he jeered.
-
-“I shall make my way back to Monte Carlo alone—_alone!_” I cried, with
-pathetic emphasis, “and not rest till I have discovered what has become
-of our poor lost friend.”
-
-“As you please,” said Brentin, sharply; “only if _you_ are caught you
-mustn’t expect any one of us to come to your rescue. It’s simply sending
-good money after bad.”
-
-Poor Lucy began to cry as, before leaving the saloon, I turned to them
-and fired my parting shot. I forget now precisely what it was, but I
-know it was both dignified and touching; feeling, as I did, rather more
-sorry for myself than even for poor Teddy. But it had no effect whatever
-in rousing any of them to accompany me on my perilous journey.
-
-Then I went back to my cabin to change my clothes, for I was still in my
-smoking-suit with the torn pocket, and, so attired, could scarcely
-venture ashore. Disguise of some sort was clearly imperative before
-trusting myself again on the scene of our so recent successful labors.
-
-Now, most providentially, before we left London, Brentin and I had gone
-off one morning to Clarkson’s, the wig-maker. It was quite possible, we
-had argued, we might have to fly, more or less closely pursued, and for
-that unpleasing eventuality had hired half a dozen wigs, among them two
-gray ones, for what are known, I believe, as “character old men.” I had
-at the same time bought a pair of gray whiskers, and, with my old
-regimental theatricals make-up box, packed them away, along with a
-quiet, elderly suit. I was always intrusted with the old men’s parts in
-our regimental theatricals, and invariably played them in a dress-coat,
-frilled shirt, and a bunch of seals with moiré antique ribbon, bending
-myself almost double and rapping with a crook stick in a manner so
-natural as to deceive even the men of my own company at the back of the
-hall. So that, unless I overacted, or a whisker came off, I felt pretty
-sure of not being recognized by comparative strangers.
-
-The quiet elderly suit I rapidly dressed myself in, and with my
-mackintosh cape, an umbrella, and the make-up box under my arm, went
-back to the saloon.
-
-I was so offended at their pusillanimity I would look at no one but
-Brentin, who, with glittering eye and long cigar, was jotting down the
-amounts of our capture on a piece of paper.
-
-“You have given the necessary orders?” I asked him, coldly.
-
-“Aye, aye, sir!” he sneered. “The yacht is now slowing down.”
-
-Lucy had gone to her cabin with my sister, in great distress, and Miss
-Rybot was sitting there with arms folded, rubbing her silver pencil
-between her lips.
-
-“Good-bye, Mr. Blacker,” she said, “and good luck to you. I admire your
-sense of loyalty. You are the only _man_ among the party!” she was good
-enough to add.
-
-“Pop, pop!” jeered the irrepressible Brentin.
-
-Arthur Masters turned pale, and from a generous fear of making him feel
-his inferiority by my presence, I bowed to them all in silence, and went
-up on deck.
-
-By this time the yacht had stopped, and off the port-beam I could just
-distinguish the dark woods of Cap Martin looming. It was about half-past
-eleven, and still slightly raining, though, fortunately, quite warm.
-
-Lucy came running up, and, sobbing, threw her arms round my neck. My
-sister kissed me affectionately, and said:
-
-“We shall see you at Venice, Vincent dear; take care of yourself!”
-
-And the next minute I was over the side and in the boat. I said never a
-word the whole time, being, I confess, deeply offended at the light way
-they all took my heroic resolution, and the assurance they showed in so
-readily believing (however flattering to my courage and address) it was
-all bound to be successful.
-
-The men rowed me ashore in silence, bade me a respectful good-night, and
-I was soon clambering over the stones and up the rough bank. Soon I was
-in the comparative shelter of the woods, and there, finding the base of
-a fir-tree tolerably dry, I sat me down to think and wait for morning.
-
-Faintly I heard midnight strike from Monte Carlo, and then, so absorbed
-in thought and conjecture I grew, I fell asleep. When I woke, it was
-just getting gray; so I rose, stretched my stiff self, and had a good
-look about me. I knew tolerably well whereabouts I was; for my sister,
-Miss Rybot, Masters, and I had one day been over Cap Martin to tea at
-the hotel, and walked back through the woods, past the Empress Eugenie’s
-villa, on to the Mentone road, and so home.
-
-We had then noticed, not far from the villa, in the woods, a small sort
-of ancient decaying gamekeeper’s lodge, painted outside with arabesque
-in the Italian manner, and faint vanishing mottoes of conviviality and
-sport; and that I determined to make for, and see if I could there
-secure facilities for shaving off my mustache, at any rate. Then I
-proposed to retire into the woods again, and assume my character old man
-wig and whiskers, and so disguised make my way leisurely back into Monte
-Carlo, to try and find news of the luckless Teddy. Beyond that, I could
-devise no plan of any sort, determining to leave all to the hazard of
-the hour.
-
-I wandered about a good time in the dawn, and at last struck the lodge,
-soon after seven, when it was growing tolerably light. It was a fine
-morning, fortunately, though very raw and cold. The lodge door was open,
-and I peeped in. Probably, in the last century, it had been a
-luncheon-house for the Grimaldis on their shooting or pleasure
-expeditions; now it was rapidly decaying, and looked like a neglected
-summerhouse. No one was to be seen, and so, the foot of a ladder showing
-to the upper room, I entered and climbed it.
-
-It was a bedroom, and evidently only just left; the bed was tumbled, and
-there was the faint, fragrant odor of a pipe.
-
-No time was to be lost, so I poured water into the basin (the owner had
-evidently not washed that morning) and got out my razors. I found a pair
-of scissors, and clipping myself as close as possible first and then
-screwing up my courage, for shaving in cold water is horribly painful,
-and lathering myself well, I set to work.
-
-I hadn’t more than half done when I heard steps outside on the wet
-gravel; they came into the house, to the foot of the ladder; then they
-began slowly to climb. There was no help for it, I must go on and trust
-to luck; so on I went with my shaving, keeping an eye meantime in the
-glass on the door behind me, so that I might gain some impression of the
-owner before tackling and conciliating him.
-
-Fortunately, when I was trying for the army, before I failed and went
-into the militia, I had been for six months with a coach at Dinan, in
-Brittany, and spoke French well enough for all vulgar purposes; so when
-the ordinary type of an old soldier, _garde champêtre_, head appeared at
-the head of the ladder, bristling with astonishment, I felt more at home
-with it than perhaps the ordinary British officer, who has only learned
-his French at Wren’s or Scoone’s, would have done.
-
-“_Dîtes donc!_” said the amazed man; “_je ne vous gêne pas?_”
-
-“_Du tout!_” I replied, “_entrez_.”
-
-“_Mais, nom d’un chien!_” he cried, coming into the room. “_Qu’est ce
-que vous faites là?_”
-
-“_Vous voyez, n’est ce pas? Je me rase._”
-
-“_Je le vois bien! et après?_”
-
-“_Après? Je m’en vais._”
-
-There was a pause while the _garde champêtre_ came alongside, and
-surveyed me with folded arms.
-
-Tears were in my eyes, for the process was a torture; but I went on with
-it heroically and in silence.
-
-At last, “_Vous êtes Américain?_” he asked.
-
-“_Mais oui. Toute ma vie!_”
-
-“_C’est bien. J’aime les Américains._”
-
-“_Merci! moi aussi!_”
-
-The man laughed, and then he went on: “_Mais, dîtes donc! Pourquoi vous
-rasez-vous ici comme ça, dans ma chambre, ma propre chambre?_”
-
-“_C’est que_—” I hesitatingly began, and then, with an inspired
-rush—“_voyez vous! Je suis marié, et je crois que ma femme me trompe._”
-
-“_Oh, la! la! Et après?_”
-
-“_Après? Je vais me déguiser et la pincer. C’est dur, n’est ce pas?_”
-
-“_Très dur!_” said the man, looking amused; “_mais les femmes sont
-toujours comme ça. Elle est Américaine?_”
-
-“_Anglaise._”
-
-“_Je déteste les Anglais! Continuez, mon bon monsieur. Je vous laisse._”
-
-“_Merci! Dans cinq minutes je descendrai._”
-
-“_Ne vous pressez pas, et déguisez-vous bien_,” he said, and, leaving
-the room, went half-way down the ladder. Then he turned and put his head
-into the room again, resting his elbows on the floor.
-
-“_Dîtes donc, mon bon monsieur_,” he said, evidently at some pains to
-check his mirth; “_avec qui croyez-vous que votre femme vous trompe?_”
-
-“_Je ne sais pas au juste. Avec un de mes amis, je crois._”
-
-“_Le misérable!_” he cried, theatrically. “_Un Français, sans doute?_”
-
-“_Oui, malheureusement._”
-
-“_Oh, la, la! Mais les amis sont comme ça. C’est très dur, tout de même.
-Courage! Je vais préparer le café. Au revoir._”
-
-With so sympathetic a _garde champêtre_ I felt I was in luck, and might
-as well seize the opportunity for assuming my complete disguise, instead
-of taking to the woods; so I put on my wig and, with some spirit-gum,
-stuck on my gray whiskers, lined my face lightly, and, in five minutes,
-presented myself to the more than ever astonished _garde champêtre_ as a
-respectable, well preserved, elderly gentleman of sixty.
-
-“_Mais nom d’un chien!_” he cried; “_c’est parfait! Elle ne vous
-reconnaîtra pas; jamais de la vie!_”
-
-We sat down and drank the coffee, the best friends in the world; and
-then, giving him a louis and the box of make-up and razors as a
-souvenir, I left him with a warm shake of the hand, and went off through
-the wood to strike the Mentone road back into Monte Carlo.
-
-I hadn’t gone twenty paces before he came running after me to say that
-if ever I wanted to disguise myself again I was to come to him and use
-his rooms, and that he would always keep the razors in order for the
-purpose.
-
-“_Mais c’est dur, tout de même_,” he added, sympathetically, as I
-promised.
-
-The last I saw of him, he turned and waved his hand. “_Adieu, mon
-vieux!_” he cried. “_Bonne chance!_”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
- IN MY DISGUISE I AM MISTAKEN FOR LORD B.—A CLUB ACQUAINTANCE—
- TEDDY AT THE LAW COURTS—MRS. WINGHAM—THE DEFENCE AND THE
- ACQUITTAL—WE BOLT
-
-
-BEHOLD me, then, in sexagenarian disguise, trudging back into Monte
-Carlo, with my mackintosh and umbrella. It was barely nine o’clock in
-the morning when I started; and, soon after ten, there I was standing
-once more in front of the Casino buildings, out of which, but a few
-hours before, I had so triumphantly rushed.
-
-Strange to say, there was no sign of anything extraordinary having
-occurred; there were the usual people sitting about reading the papers
-on the seats round the flower-beds, the usual attendants loafing on the
-steps, guarding the entrance. Over the building flapped, as ever, the
-dingy Monaco flag.
-
-My first feeling was of intense annoyance and disgust that,
-notwithstanding our complete success, the nefarious business was
-apparently being carried on as usual. What on earth did it all mean?
-Were sixty thousand pounds as naught to them? Were they placidly going
-to put up with their loss, rather than advertise their misfortune? or,
-under this apparent calm, were there really depths of trouble and
-vengeance stirring—already rising—to ingulf poor Teddy, whom I never
-doubted from the first was captured, and now shortly about to appear
-before the Prince’s judges away up at Monaco, bent in painful submission
-at the criminal bar!
-
-I sat down for a few moments to consider what should be done, and look
-about me for some one to whom I could apply for trustworthy information:
-what was thought of us, and what steps the authorities proposed to take.
-
-There was an old gentlemen, an Englishman, evidently, sitting on my
-seat; and, as one garrulous old person to another might, I proceeded to
-try him cautiously with a few questions. Did he know, could he tell me,
-at what hour the rooms opened?
-
-He looked at me over his pince-nez, and said at twelve. Then he flipped
-his pince-nez off, smiled, and, giving me a friendly look, politely
-observed he believed he and I were members of the same distinguished
-club, the Mausolœum. He dared say I hadn’t forgotten dining next him
-there in the autumn, and the interesting talk we had then had.
-
-“Aye, aye, aye,” I mumbled, in my fright, a mixture of Punch and
-Pantaloon.
-
-He had seen me walking about before, he went on (what on earth did he
-mean by that, I wondered), and had meant to take the liberty of speaking
-to me. What I had said in the autumn had interested and impressed him
-very much, and he had often thought over it. Then he folded up his
-paper, and evidently began to lay himself out for a renewal of our
-supposed conversation, a prospect which much alarmed and disconcerted
-me.
-
-I scarcely liked to exercise the complete vigor of my youth and make an
-immediate bolt; for I had doddered up to the seat and, like an aged
-pensioner, sat me down with a loud sigh of relief—rather overacting, in
-fact; so, if I were to keep up the character, I must at least dodder
-away again when I left. Yet, however complimentary to my make-up, it
-was, just at present, a distinct nuisance to find myself mistaken for
-somebody else, and likely to be detained over a conversation which,
-under no circumstances, could ever have had the faintest interest for
-me.
-
-To prevent that, I cautiously began:
-
-“My servant tells me there was a robbery, or something of that sort, in
-the rooms last night.”
-
-“Oh!” said my club comrade.
-
-“Have you heard anything about it?”
-
-“No, indeed.”
-
-“The Casino authorities keep a thing of that sort pretty close, I
-imagine,” I cautiously ventured.
-
-“They’re quite right,” the old gentleman replied. “Quite right!” Then,
-after a pause, he went on, “I suppose you never spoke to Markham on the
-subject, after all?”
-
-“No, indeed, I didn’t,” I mumbled, making the best reply I could under
-the circumstances. “Fact is, I never saw him.”
-
-“Why, didn’t he turn up?”
-
-“I forget.” And then I uneasily added, “You know what a feather-headed
-feller he is.”
-
-The old gentleman laughed and said, “Somebody ought to speak to him,
-though.”
-
-“Well, what’s the matter with his wife?” I said, unconsciously, dropping
-into one of Brentin’s phrases.
-
-“That’s more than I can tell you,” the old gentleman replied. “She’s
-looked like that for a long time now.”
-
-I was so rapidly getting tired of this footling talk, not to mention the
-fibs it entailed and the precious time being wasted, that, at any cost,
-I determined to put a stop to it; so I rose with an effort, and saying,
-vaguely, “Well, I’ve got to meet my wife; good-day to you! I dare say I
-shall see you again somewhere about,” strolled off towards the Casino
-steps.
-
-The old gentleman, who had evidently looked forward to a long
-conversation, answered me rather gruffly, “Good-day!”—while straight up
-to one of the attendants at the head of the steps I walked.
-
-“Yes, _monsieur_,” the man politely said, “the rooms are open for play
-at twelve.”
-
-“As usual?” I pointedly observed.
-
-“Altogether as usual.”
-
-“Notwithstanding the robbery?”
-
-“Oh, as for that,” the man replied, shrugging his shoulders, “it was a
-very small affair. The miserable was caught and would be punished.”
-
-An Englishman, I understood.
-
-Yes, an Englishman. No doubt at this moment he was being tried, and
-already safe in prison. “_Au revoir, monsieur! à votre service,
-monsieur!_”
-
-My legs felt fully their assumed age as I turned and faltered down the
-steps. So all hope was over; poor Teddy was really caught, and the
-regiment would know him no more. Unless!—why, what could I do?—good
-gracious!—
-
-I was so deep in my own troubled thoughts and plans, I scarcely noticed
-my supposed old club friend on the seat; should not have noticed him at
-all, in fact, had I not just at this moment, when I was calling a
-carriage to drive up to the “Monopôle,” come plump on the other highly
-respectable elderly gentleman I evidently so closely resembled.
-
-Face to face we met, and naturally stared at each other. Will it be
-believed we were absolutely exactly alike, down even to the cut and
-color of our clothes? For the first and only time in my life I saw
-myself at full length, myself as I should be at sixty (if I only took
-care of myself), sedate, healthy, a county magistrate, member of
-Brooke’s, with my youngest boy just leaving Eton. I hurried into the
-carriage and told the man to drive up to the “Monopôle” as fast as he
-could go, just giving a look round at my friend on the seat as I got in.
-He had turned, and, with his hands on his knees, was staring after me,
-dumbfounded. My double had turned and was staring after me too.
-
-To both those gentlemen, if they should ever chance to read this work, I
-offer my sincere apology; they will understand now the reason of my
-accidental resemblance, and, as between men of the world, will no doubt
-forgive it. I can assure them both it will not occur again; how can it,
-seeing that wig and whiskers are buried under an olive-tree on the
-Mentone road?
-
-At the “Monopôle”—having, of course, no notion who I really was—they
-were very polite. No, Madame Wingham was not in; they couldn’t say where
-she was; a letter had come for her early and she had gone out.
-Instinctively, I felt the letter was from Teddy, imploring succor.
-
-I left the hotel at once and drove straight up to Monaco. At the
-cathedral I dismissed the carriage and walked on to the law courts. What
-to do I had no idea; watch the proceedings, at any rate, _incognito_
-from the back, and, at the worst, hear with my own sad ears how much
-poor Teddy got. Any thought of rescue was, of course, out of the
-question. What could a poor old person of sixty do against soldiers and
-gendarmes?
-
-The criminal court of Monaco sits in a bare upper room, close to the
-cathedral. Outside, steep steps of the usual _Palais de Justice_
-inverted V-shape lead up to it, with, at their head, a bare flag-pole,
-like a barber’s sign. Up the steps I walked, and with beating heart (for
-my own sake, I confess, as much as for poor Teddy’s) entered the fatal,
-the lethal chamber. It was very full and stuffy. News of our victory and
-the capture of one of the band no doubt had spread, for the public part
-was crammed, tightly as sardines and garlic. Facing, under a crucifix,
-from over which the dingy green curtain was drawn, sat three judges;
-three real judges, in their bands and toques and ermine! Common white
-bedroom blinds scarcely kept the sun out, streaming in mistily on the
-members of the bar in beards and gowns, on the _greffier_ busily
-writing, and the usher waiting to summon the luckless Parsons to the
-dock. Just at present the judges were bending the weight of their
-intellects on a couple of market-women charged with fighting; and there,
-tightly wedged against the partition, stood the forlorn Mrs. Wingham, a
-handkerchief in her black kid grasp, bending and talking tearfully to
-the barrister seated below, whom she apparently had engaged for the
-defence.
-
-I made my way to her and pulled her sleeve.
-
-“Come outside,” I whispered; “it’s I—hush!—Vincent Blacker.”
-
-She stared at me, and then at last followed obediently to the door. We
-stood outside at the head of the steps.
-
-“They’ve got him, I suppose?” I asked.
-
-“Oh, you cowards!” she gasped, “to run away and leave him.”
-
-“Never mind that now,” I answered; “_I_ have come back, at any rate. Let
-us consider what can be done. You’ve got some one to defend him?”
-
-“But the man talks such horrible French, I can’t understand a word he
-says,” she moaned, “and he reeks of garlic. And where’s my brother,
-James Thompson?”
-
-“He’s all right,” I evasively replied. “Never mind him just now. We must
-really concentrate ourselves on doing something for poor Teddy.”
-
-“Oh, I dare say! Now you mind this, young man!” cried Mrs. Wingham, with
-sudden vindictiveness. “If he goes to prison you go, too! I won’t ’ear
-of his going alone. I’ll shout to the police! I’ll ’ave you arrested! He
-sha’n’t be the only one to suffer, poor young lamb!”
-
-The hair under my wig stood up on end, and even my false whiskers
-stiffened. The old woman was quite capable of executing her threat, and
-for a moment I felt, not sixty, but a hundred.
-
-Outwardly, however, I was calm.
-
-“Desperate cases require desperate remedies,” I judicially observed.
-“Take my arm and let us return to court. We’ll adopt our own line of
-defence. Come along, ma’am, and for the present kindly remember I am
-your husband and my name is Wingham.”
-
-The vicious old woman held me so tightly, I knew that if Teddy went
-under and were condemned she meant me to go under, too. Together we
-wedged our way to the partition, just above our odoriferous barrister. I
-was bending to speak to him when suddenly a bell was rung and Teddy was
-immediately ushered, nay, thrust, in, between a couple of gendarmes.
-
-Poor chap, he was almost unrecognizable, he had been so roughly handled.
-His smoking-suit was torn, and round his neck, in place of collar and
-tie, he had knotted a handkerchief, coster fashion; but what mostly
-disguised and disfigured him was his gashed and puffed face; for in
-falling down the steps he had fallen plump on a bunch of cactus, scoring
-him as though he had been mauled by an angry tigress. He never had been
-pretty, but now he looked exactly like the malefactor that, in the eye
-of the law, at any rate, I suppose he really was.
-
-“Oh, just look at his face!” gasped Mrs. Wingham. “Oh, the poor
-creature!”
-
-“Hush!” I whispered; “for goodness’ sake keep calm. And kindly remember
-he’s our nephew.”
-
-I judged it wisest to hear the evidence against him before considering
-the line we should take in his defence. I contented myself for the
-present with whispering to our counsel that the prisoner was our nephew,
-his arrest a complete mistake, and he himself as innocent of any attempt
-at robbery as the newly born.
-
-Meantime, in French fashion, the President of the Court—a robust old
-man with a white beard and a red face, like a neatly trimmed Father
-Christmas—after reading the act of accusation, was the first to tackle
-and brow-beat our unfortunate friend. To do him justice, Teddy kept
-beautifully cool (he says now he recognized me and my wink through the
-disguise, and knew he was safe) and answered nothing through his puffed
-mouth but _Nong!_ and _Jammy!_ Every now and then the President, in the
-politest manner in the world, observed, “_Vous mentez, jeune homme!_” or
-“_C’est faux!_” while the judge on his right, a battered little man with
-blue glasses and his mouth all fallen in, ejaculated “_Quelle
-effronterie!_” or “_C’est abominable!_” at intervals.
-
-As a matter of fact, the evidence against him (according to our English
-notions, at any rate) was far from strong. There were croupiers present
-ready to swear to having seen him in the rooms, charging down on the
-tables with a revolver; there were the men from the door to swear they
-had noticed him rush past; and there were the firemen who had found him
-crawling away behind the signal-box, down on the line, after we had got
-clear away. Very good. But the cactus had, for the present, so
-disfigured him, that an adroit cross-examination could not fail very
-much to shake them, and that, no doubt, the President felt; for, after
-wrangling with Teddy for some time, and receiving nothing but an
-eruption of _Nongs_ and _Jammys_ for his pains, he ill-temperedly cried
-identification would be useless and unfair with the accused’s face in
-its present condition, and that, until the swelling disappeared, he
-should remand him; by which time, he sardonically added, he had no doubt
-the other malefactors would be before him in a row.
-
-Teddy gave me a piteous glance, and, nerving myself, I nudged our
-barrister, whom all along I had been coaching, and up he got.
-
-Now, most fortunately, when poor Teddy was caught, neither revolver nor
-spoil were found on him; spoil he had never had, and the revolver, after
-the final discharge, he had hurled over the embankment into the sea. And
-he had always told the same story: that he had truly enough been in the
-rooms, but had nothing whatever to do with the robbery, having been
-forced out in the disturbance, and run as the others had; running, in
-his alarm, he knew not where, until he fell down the steps, lost his
-senses, and, coming to, found himself in the hands of the police. He was
-a quiet, respectable young Englishman, he declared, come to Monte Carlo
-for his health, and staying with his aunt at the hotel “Monopôle,” to
-whom (as I thought) he had early despatched a note, announcing himself
-as her nephew and in trouble, and imploring help.
-
-And here we were to claim him, after so unpleasant an experience, Milor
-and Madame Ving-ham—so the barrister announced us!—persons of the
-highest consideration and wealth, constant visitors on the shores of the
-hospitable Riviera; in short, this, that, and the other, all couched in
-the finest language, and none of it in the least true. And then, in a
-final peroration, amid murmurs of sympathy, culminating in a burst of
-applause, the barrister threw up his fat hands, and invoked justice,
-mercy, and international law (not to mention the hospitality of old
-Greece and Rome), and, sitting down, wiped his forehead with the sleeve
-of his gown; while Madame Ving-ham judiciously lifted up her troubled
-voice, and wept louder than ever.
-
-When the emotion had subsided, the President called me forward, and for
-the second time that morning my unlucky resemblance to another gentleman
-(a nobleman, by-the-way, as it turned out) was likely to get me into
-further trouble; for in me, Vincent Blacker, disguised as an old boy of
-sixty, the President imagined he recognized, just as my club friend had
-done an hour before, a distinguished guest he had met the previous
-evening at the Prince’s table; with whom he had held an improving
-discussion as to the present unsatisfactory condition of the British
-House of Lords, and the best method of amending, without destroying it.
-
-“_Comment, Milor!_” he cried, in astonishment, looking at me over his
-glasses; “_c’est votre Seigneurie?_”
-
-Good Lord, I said to myself, here we are again—giving the old man a
-polite but alarmed bow and smile.
-
-But the President knew me as Milor B., he ventured to observe (I really
-don’t quite like to give the illustrious name), and here was our
-advocate announcing me as some one else!
-
-I hastened to explain, with perspiration on my brow, that Ving-ham was
-my second title, and in an unfortunate affair of this kind—_Cour
-d’Assises_, in short—I did not care for my first to be publicly mixed
-up.
-
-The President bowed and said that was well understood, and then he
-proceeded to put me a few exceedingly polite and fatuous questions about
-Teddy, who, as a contrite nephew cut to the heart at so unfortunately
-dragging an old and honored name through the purlieus of the criminal
-law, was acting his part to perfection.
-
-Yes, monsieur was my nephew, of a character gentle and affectionate; of
-retiring habits and delicate health, a little _poitrinaire_, in fact (at
-which Teddy, comprehending, coughed with unnecessary violence), but all
-that was of obedient, tractable, and good. He had gone down to the
-Casino, while we, my wife and I—Madame Ving-ham still weeping—had gone
-to bed, believing he was in his room; and the next we had heard was
-early that morning, when we received a note from him announcing the
-unfortunate capture and mistake. _Monsieur le Président_ would readily
-understand what of grief and desolation?—my affectionate uncle’s voice,
-with a touch of an only nephew in it, trembled, and madame shook
-convulsively as, still grasping my arm tight, she moaned and sobbed.
-
-That was more than enough. In a very few minutes, after a brief
-consultation among the judges, Teddy was released and dramatically
-embracing us in the body of the court—thereby nearly bringing off my
-left whisker—and I was paying our eloquent counsel. Before I left the
-yacht I had providentially provided myself with a bundle of notes from
-the heap of spoil on the table, and one of them—for a thousand
-francs—I presented to the astonished and gratified barrister. I
-trembled to think how much more than ever for the next few days he would
-reek of his favorite _ail_.
-
-Out went Mrs. Wingham, arm in arm with Teddy, and I followed, after
-declining the President’s kind invitation to breakfast with him, on the
-score of my overwrought feelings.
-
-Just as I was going down the steps a man I recognized as a croupier
-touched me respectfully on the arm, with a crafty, meridional smile. I
-stopped in some alarm, thinking it possible I was discovered. What did
-he want? Why, Milor no doubt remembered that lady whom Milor had
-commissioned the croupier to find out all about and let him know?
-Perfectly, I replied, with stiff and aristocratic upper lip. What had he
-discovered?
-
-She was an Italian, one Madame Vagliano, and she lived at the Villa des
-Genets, above the Condamine. He was proceeding with more information,
-when I haughtily cut him short with “_C’est bien! assez! voici madame
-qui nous observe_,” and handing him a note, which I afterwards
-discovered was unfortunately one of a thousand francs instead of, as I
-meant, a hundred, I hurried to the foot of the steps, where madame and
-Teddy were awaiting me. _Ce scélèrat de Lord B.!_ I have really a good
-mind to give his illustrious name, after all.
-
-We walked on a little way in silence, and then Mrs. Wingham said, with
-traces of tearfulness:
-
-“What are you two villains going to do now?”
-
-“Bolt!” I replied, laconically.
-
-“And where’s my poor brother James all this time?”
-
-“He’s all right, enjoying himself first-rate, sailing about somewhere in
-the _Saratoga_.”
-
-“What’s the _Saratoga_?”
-
-“A well-appointed steam-yacht, belonging to a friend of ours.”
-
-“You thieving wretches! You’ve been and decoyed him on board, you know
-you ’ave.”
-
-“Well, he’s perfectly safe, wherever he is. Come along, Teddy, there’s
-no time to be lost.”
-
-“But I can’t go like this,” cried Teddy. “I haven’t even got a hat, and
-all my clothes are on the yacht.”
-
-We bought him a dreadful French straw-hat up in Monaco, and then we
-jumped into a carriage and drove down to the tailor’s, next the “Grand
-Hotel.” As we drove, I questioned Mrs. Wingham as to what was known and
-said in the town about our escapade.
-
-“Why,” said Mrs. Wingham, “people have been terribly frightened, and are
-beginning to leave the place.”
-
-“Good! And what line are the authorities taking?”
-
-“They are denying it all, right and left, but they are determined to
-catch you, all the same.”
-
-“They can’t do both!” I coldly replied. “They’d much better put up with
-their loss; we shall put the money to much better use than they could
-ever have done. If they are going to make themselves unpleasant over it,
-you may tell them from me we’ll come back and do precisely the same
-thing next year.”
-
-“You impudent young feller!” cried the angry old woman, “you forget that
-one of the sharpest detectives in England is after you.”
-
-“He’s taking a mighty circuitous route!”
-
-“But he’ll catch you, all the same, at last.”
-
-“Will he?” I answered, eying her with cold amusement. “Now look here,
-missus, if you say much more I’ll communicate with Van Ginkel, and
-direct him to take the yacht across to Cuba and have James landed and
-shot there as a filibuster.”
-
-Whereupon the poor old soul fell to whimpering again, though at the same
-time she couldn’t help laughing a little at my readiness.
-
-Teddy was soon fitted out at the tailor’s, and a sight he looked in what
-they called the _dernier cri_ of a French travelling costume; more like
-a young man out of the _Petit Journal pour rire_ than anything.
-
-“Adieu, Madame Ving-ham!” I laughed, as we got outside. “Your nephew and
-I are going to get bicycles and be off down the Corniche, over the
-Italian frontier. Say good-bye to him, and be off home to Brixton
-yourself as soon as possible, or you may get into trouble with the
-police here for using a false title of nobility. Now, you did, you know!
-it’s no use your denying it. Take my advice; the quieter you keep for
-the next few months the better.”
-
-She was so angry she wouldn’t say good-bye to me, but she overwhelmed
-poor Parsons. And she implored him as soon as possible to give up my
-desperate bad company, which, sooner or later, could only bring him to
-ruin—I, if you please, who at so much risk had just rescued him!—and
-to write to her soon to Brixton, and come and see her directly he got
-back.
-
-She stood watching us as we went off to the bicycle man’s in the Arcade,
-near Ciro’s, and kept on waving her handkerchief till we got into the
-gardens across the road and were lost to view.
-
-“Now let this be a lesson to you, my son,” I sagely observed, as we
-hurried along, “always to make yourself pleasant and polite to old
-ladies. But for Mrs. Wingham, you might have been dragging a cannon-ball
-at your ankle for years.”
-
-Teddy shuddered, and said:
-
-“What a blessing I resembled her nephew!”
-
-“And mine!” I added. “Don’t forget me.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
- OUR FLIGHT TO VENICE—THENCE TO ATHENS—WE ALL MEET ON THE
- ACROPOLIS—REAPPEARANCE OF MR. BAILEY THOMPSON!—AGAIN WE MANAGE
- TO PUT HIM OFF THE SCENT
-
-
-OF our flight down the Corniche and across the Italian frontier I do not
-propose to say much. Suffice it that, at a quiet spot before we reached
-Mentone, I found the opportunity to strip off my disguise and, for
-precaution’s sake, bury both wig and whiskers at the root of an
-olive-tree; where no doubt they still remain, if any one cares to go and
-look for them. In well under the hour, so fast we travelled, we were
-over the Italian border, just beyond Mentone, and, after the usual
-difficulties with the _dogana_ about our bicycles, were before very long
-safely seated in the Ventimiglia train for Turin. To avoid being further
-troubled with the machines, we presented them to a couple of porters,
-and, while waiting for the train, passed a highly amusing half-hour
-watching them trying to learn to ride.
-
-Our point was Venice, and, travelling all night, on the afternoon of the
-next day (Sunday, January 19th) Teddy and I were glad to find ourselves
-in a gondola, flapping along to the “Grand Hotel,” where we were all to
-meet.
-
-But at the “Grand” there was a telegram awaiting me: “_Come
-Athens—Brentin._” It had been sent from Messina the previous afternoon,
-and, disagreeable though it was, there was nothing for it but to obey.
-
-We went off at once to Cook’s offices in the Piazza to inquire about a
-steamer; but, being Sunday, of course found them closed. Very awkward!
-Surely, nowadays, when they open the museums, Mr. Cook might stretch a
-point and do the same with his offices?
-
-What on earth were we to do? It was evident they didn’t care about
-receiving us at the hotel; I was exceedingly dirty, with the remains of
-the spirit-gum on my cheeks and the lines of the old-age pencil
-alongside my nose; and poor Teddy’s puffs and scars were all the more
-noticeable now they were just beginning to heal. We looked, in short,
-like a couple of broken-down sea-side entertainers, who had had a row at
-the last hall about returning the money. We had no luggage, not even a
-sponge-bag, and I had talked grandly about the yacht until I found the
-telegram, when I had to admit it wasn’t coming; at which the manager had
-merely bowed with sour and silent politeness. “Then you don’t stay
-here!” I read as plainly as possible in his watchful eye.
-
-We went on down to the Piazzetta, to the harbor side, to see if we could
-by chance hear of a vessel sailing for Athens.
-
-“Yes,” grumbled Teddy, “and when we get to Athens we shall find another
-wire, with ‘_Come Timbuctoo!_’ Let’s cut it short and go home by rail. I
-don’t feel safe in these foreign parts. Oh, how glad I shall be to get
-back to Southport again!”
-
-“Strolling up and down Lord Street, eh? in those eternal breeches and
-gaiters.”
-
-“Well, why not? Come, let’s be off. I don’t know why we need follow them
-half over Europe.”
-
-“Certainly, let’s be off,” said I, “if you don’t mind paying for the
-tickets.”
-
-“Why, you don’t mean to say you haven’t got enough money?”
-
-It was true, I hadn’t. What with the thousand francs for the defence,
-the thousand for the croupier who told me about Madame Vagliano (what
-the deuce did I care about Madame Vagliano!), the buying of the
-bicycles, the clothes for Teddy, the tickets, and one thing and another,
-I had only two or three hundred francs left; and Teddy had merely a
-couple of louis, having spent the rest in bribing the Monte Carlo police
-to carry his letter to Mrs. Wingham and put him in a better cell.
-
-Nothing, I think, tries a man’s nature more truly than travelling and
-the contretemps arising therefrom; nothing more surely discovers his
-selfishness, his meanness, his want of even temper. We were certainly
-rather in a fix, but scarcely to warrant Teddy’s outburst of anger and
-ill-humor. If I was amused at it all and kept my equanimity, why
-couldn’t he? But no! he kept on fuming and fretting to such a degree
-that I was within an ace of decoying him up a piccolo canal and beating
-him soundly about the head and ears, so much did he grate upon my
-nerves.
-
-At last we did manage to secure passages in a dirty Italian boat, _Il
-Principe Umberto_, sailing that night down the coast to Ancona and
-Brindisi, and thence across the Adriatic, _viâ_ Corfu, to Patras. It was
-rather a tight fit, financially speaking, for after paying for our
-berths and allowing something for food on board, we had only just about
-enough left for the tickets from Patras to Athens. If the yacht didn’t
-turn up there, then we should be in a fix indeed.
-
-We went back to the hotel, and, ordering dinner, spent the time till it
-was ready in the reading-room. There were no London papers, of course,
-of Saturday’s date, but there were plenty of French and Italian. Most of
-them had a paragraph about us and our doings, very guardedly expressed.
-None of them went further than merely saying there had been an audacious
-attempt at robbery in the rooms at Monte Carlo on Friday night, and much
-excitement in consequence; but without exception they hastened to add
-that all connected with it were in the hands of the police, tranquillity
-reigned, and play was going on as usual. Teddy and I pointed each other
-out the paragraphs as we found them, and chuckled over them amazingly.
-
-Over the voyage I draw a veil; enough that it was exceedingly rough and
-uncomfortable, and we were both very unwell, as somehow one always is if
-one has to go second class. My only consolation lay in occasionally
-seeing an extremely good-looking Italian stewardess, who looked in on us
-every now and then, and sympathetically said “_Male?_” I never answered
-her; I don’t know a word of Italian, and I couldn’t have said it if I
-had; but it was something occasionally to see her fine, serious,
-handsome face, shining in over our deathliness like a star.
-
-At Corfu we managed to drag ourselves ashore for a couple of hours, and
-mooned about arm-in-arm, in unsteady rapture at the warmth and sunshine.
-At the hotel where we lunched we found the English papers. One of them
-(that hebetated old ——, I think it was) had “Extraordinary Story from
-Monte Carlo” among its foreign intelligence—just a few lines, to say an
-attempt had been made by some Americans to raid the rooms, that it had
-been completely frustrated, so far as plunder was concerned, but the
-desperadoes had got clear away in a yacht known as the _Saratoga_. And
-that, so far as I could ever afterwards learn, was the only reference to
-our affair in the whole of the English press.
-
-As for the _New York Guardian_, they declared the thieves were all
-English, many of them well-known in New York, where the season before
-they had masqueraded as peers and peers’ sons, and some of them nearly
-succeeded in marrying prominent and wealthy society young ladies.
-Really, when one happens to be a little behind the scenes, one is amazed
-at the pompous inaccuracy of much of the information in the newspapers.
-But, on the whole, I thought it wisest not to write and attempt to put
-them straight.
-
-On the Wednesday morning, early, we reached Patras, and were in Athens
-soon after six. We drove up to the best hotel, but there was no news
-whatever of the yacht. We had been so unwell, for after leaving Corfu it
-again became fearfully rough, we looked more disreputable than ever. It
-was no time, however, to be scrupulous, and I carried matters with such
-a high hand, and was so dissatisfied and overbearing, we soon got rooms,
-dined, and went to bed. I have always noticed, by-the-way, that if you
-are rude and give yourself airs of importance, even without luggage, you
-can generally get what you want in the way of accommodation. Most people
-think you wouldn’t swagger or be insolent unless you were really
-somebody, and either get out of the way and let you take what you want,
-or give it you, bent double with obsequiousness. But, then, most people
-are fools. So Teddy and I got two of the best bedrooms, after totally
-refusing others, and slept in them with great comfort and soundness;
-though all the money we had between us was seven francs fifty.
-
-Next morning, soon after breakfast, we went up to the Acropolis. From my
-school-days I knew it commanded a fine view, and hoped from thence soon
-to descry the _Amaranth_.
-
-’Οιμοι! there wasn’t a sign of her. We could look right down into the
-harbor of the Piræus, three or four miles away, and the only occupants
-were a Greek man-of-war and a couple of trading brigs. To comfort Teddy,
-I pointed him out various famous islands—Salamis and Aegina, and so
-forth—telling him such stories from Greek history as I could remember,
-or partially invent. In the Acropolis itself, wandering among the
-splendid and touching ruins, there wasn’t a soul but a dirty man, with
-large patches on his knees, gathering snails.
-
-“He follows the footsteps of Pericles, of Alcibiades, and of Solon,” I
-said, “and from their dim traces he gathers snails for soup. Such, my
-dear Teddy,” I added, tranquilly, “is all the history he knows. To him
-the Acropolis is nothing but a hunting-ground for snails.”
-
-“You’re talking exactly like Mr. Barlow!” replied Teddy, with a
-dissatisfied snort.
-
-In the afternoon we again set out for the Acropolis. At the bottom of
-the sacred ascent a couple of carriages were waiting.
-
-“It can scarcely be they,” I said. “They would come round and try all
-the hotels first, surely.”
-
-“Oh, a man like Brentin would do anything!” Teddy cried.
-
-I looked into the first carriage, and soon recognized a little, rather
-old, cloak Lucy used to wear, with a high Medici collar. She never had
-much money for her clothes, poor child, and was apt to be a little
-behind the fashions.
-
-“It’s really they, Teddy,” I said. “Come along and we’ll give them a
-fright. They deserve it.”
-
-“They do, indeed!” shouted Teddy, scarlet with rage.
-
-We peeped in cautiously at the entrance, and there they were. We could
-see them all crossing from the Parthenon towards the Erechtheum, headed
-by that toad Brentin. We let them get well inside the walls of the
-beautiful little temple, and then we went quickly across to the left
-towards them.
-
-Just as we got up to the white marble walls, I pushed Teddy and said,
-“Hide.” Then I went on in alone. Brentin was just saying, “This is
-apparently the Erechtheum. There’s mighty little of it left; why don’t
-they put it straight, anyway?”
-
-You should just have seen their faces when they turned and saw me. Lucy,
-who was looking very pale, ran tottering towards me with a little cry,
-and nearly fainted in my arms. My sister followed, and was soon on my
-other shoulder. Miss Rybot waved her parasol, Forsyth and Hines cheered,
-and Arthur Masters gave a loud _gone away_! All Brentin said was, with
-rather a forced smile, “Well, all right, eh? Here you are. You got my
-telegram?”
-
-We sat down on the fallen blocks of marble, and everybody began talking
-at once. Where was Teddy, they asked, and why wasn’t he with me? Had he
-really been caught, or had he, after all, run straight away home in his
-fright?
-
-As if trying to avoid a painful subject, “Why didn’t you come to Venice,
-as we arranged?” I asked.
-
-“We heard the French corvette was somewhere up in those waters,” Brentin
-replied, “and thought it safer not. We should have come to look for you
-here _at_ once, only we calculated you couldn’t possibly arrive till
-to-morrow. But what about Parsons? What’s the matter with your telling
-us all about Parsons?”
-
-“Poor Teddy!” I sighed, and everybody looked shocked. I had scarcely
-made up my mind whether to say he was dead, or in prison for life, when
-Teddy himself suddenly fell in among us on his hands and knees. He
-looked so ghastly, with his white face and red cactus scars—to say
-nothing of his extraordinary way of entering—that the ladies began to
-scream, and Bob Hines fell over backward.
-
-“Teddy!”
-
-“Hush! Hush! Hush!” hissed Teddy. “Bailey Thompson!”
-
-“Im-pawsible,” snarled Brentin. “He’s in Minorca.”
-
-“I say it’s Bailey Thompson. I saw him from outside, just coming in.”
-
-“Alone?”
-
-“Yes. Keep quiet!”
-
-We all huddled close together and kept as still as death.
-
-“I couldn’t be mistaken,” Teddy whispered. “He’s got on the same clothes
-and carrying the shawl, and he was looking about him, just as he used at
-Monte Carlo.”
-
-“You don’t say!” said Brentin, looking scared. “What the plague is he
-doing in Athens? We shall have all our trouble over again.” And then,
-thinking he was not very polite, he added, “And how are you? All right?”
-
-“No thanks to you!” grunted Teddy, at which the unfeeling Brentin began
-to chuckle.
-
-“Somebody’s scratched your face well for you,” he laughed. “Looks like
-marriage lines!”
-
-We lay very still, hoping against hope Thompson wouldn’t think the
-Erechtheum worth a visit; but the fact was he had looked in the
-carriages outside and questioned the driver, and, from the cloaks and
-what the man had said, made up his mind it was our party. So, after
-peeping in at the Parthenon, he came straight across; we heard his
-footsteps, the divisional tread, closer and closer. Then he tumbled over
-a column, swore, and the next moment was inside surveying us, huddled
-together like a covey of partridges, with an expression I don’t find it
-at all easy to describe—it was such a mixture of everything.
-
-Poor creature, he had evidently suffered! His face was drawn, his beard
-unshaved, and his forlorn eyes looked defiantly out from under a heavily
-lined brow. His mouth was tight and grim, and yet about the compressed
-lips there was an air of satisfaction, almost of unholy mirth. When he
-saw us, ran his glance over us and noted we were all there, netted for
-the fowler, flame leaped to his sombre eyes. There was dead silence
-while he stepped majestically, solemnly forward, threw his plaid shawl
-on a column, and unbuttoned his dusty frock-coat.
-
-“And how are you?” said Brentin, coolly. “Come to see over the
-Acropolis?”
-
-Thompson glared at him, and without replying sat down on his shawl.
-
-“How did you get here? Had a good voyage? Sakes alive, man, what a hole
-in your boot!”
-
-“Poor man!” whispered Lucy, “how fearfully tired and ill he looks.”
-
-At so unexpected an expression of sympathy, the detective’s expression
-suddenly changed. Poor wretch, he was worn out, hungry, and depressed;
-humiliated and miserable, I suppose, at being so egregiously outwitted;
-for his lip trembled, and, putting his face in his dog-skin hands, he
-actually began to cry. I never felt so ashamed of myself, so sorry for a
-man, in my life.
-
-“Cry, baby, cry!” taunted Brentin. “Serve you thundering well right—”
-
-“Be quiet!” I sternly cried. Brentin scowled at me, while poor Thompson
-began to search with blinking eyes for his handkerchief.
-
-Then I went on, with real feeling in my voice:
-
-“We are sorry, Mr. Thompson, for the way we have treated you, but you
-must see there was no other course open to us. We were entirely frank
-with you, but you were never frank with us. We discovered your identity
-quite by accident, and took the advantage we thought our due of the
-discovery.”
-
-“Oh, all right, sir, thank you!”
-
-“At any rate,” struck in the irrepressible Brentin, with a wink at me,
-“you have the satisfaction of knowing you spoiled a fine piece of work,
-which will now, I guess, be consummated by other more imperfect hands
-than ours.”
-
-“What!” said the detective, brightening. “You never even made the
-attempt?”
-
-“What do you take us for?” cried the ingenious and evasive Brentin.
-“Make an attempt of that nature, with the sharpest detective in old
-England on our heels? No, sir!”
-
-Thompson looked pleased, and then, with sly malice, observed:
-
-“But, after all, gentlemen, you might have done it with perfect safety.”
-
-“What!”
-
-“With the most perfect safety, I assure you. I had not yet communicated
-with the Monte Carlo police.”
-
-“That so? But afterwards?”
-
-“Oh, afterwards, I should have pinched you all, of course!”
-
-“There you are!” cried Brentin; “we knew that, mighty well. No, sir!
-There are no flies on us. You gave us a fright, Mr. Bailey Thompson, and
-we, I guess, have given you one. But no real damage has been done to
-either party. Let us cry quits. Your hand, sir!”
-
-The simple fellow shook his hand obediently, and, polite as ever, bowed
-to the ladies. My sister he already knew. She smiled at him and said:
-
-“But how on earth have you got here, Mr. Bailey Thompson? We all
-understood you were going to the Balearic Isles.”
-
-“I know nothing of my original destination, madam,” the detective
-replied. “I only know that after steaming for some few hours in one
-direction, Mr. Van Ginkel suddenly bouted ship and went full speed in
-the other.”
-
-“But why, I wonder?”
-
-“Some matter, I understood from the captain, connected with his divorced
-wife.”
-
-“The Princess Danleno,” said Brentin.
-
-“Some such name. She had left Cannes and gone to San Remo, and Mr. Van
-Ginkel was anxious to see her and effect a reconciliation, so the
-captain told me. He is full of caprice, like all invalids, and on the
-caprice seizing him he simply bouted ship without a word. But first he
-had to get rid of me; so he carried me, full speed ahead, to the
-southernmost point of Greece—somewhere near Cape Colonna, I
-believe—and there he carted me ashore, gentlemen, like a sack of
-coals.”
-
-The poor man’s lip began to tremble again, and he looked round our
-circle piteously for sympathy.
-
-“Dear! dear!” murmured Brentin; “how like him! And never said a word the
-whole time, I dare say?”
-
-“Not one! That was early on Monday morning. Since then I have been
-slowly making my way up the Morea with great difficulty and discomfort,
-mainly on foot, and sometimes getting a lift in a country wagon. At
-Nauplia I managed to secure a passage in a coasting steamer, which,
-after a tempestuous voyage, has just landed me at the Piræus. There I
-saw your yacht, gentlemen, and knew, of course, you were in the
-neighborhood.”
-
-“How did you manage about the language in the Peloponnese?” asked Hines,
-curiously.
-
-“Why, fortunately, I can draw a little,” replied the detective, who was
-every moment recovering his spirits, “and anything I wanted I drew. But,
-often as I drew a beefsteak or a chop, gentlemen,” he said, plaintively,
-“I never got it. Nothing but eggs and a sort of polenta, and once—only
-once—goat’s flesh, when I drew a bedstead, in token that I wanted to
-sleep there. And the fleas, gentlemen, the fleas!” he cried. “There is a
-large Greek flea—”
-
-“Never mind that just now,” said Brentin, gravely. “There are elegant
-and refined ladies present. The essential is you are safe, and bear us
-all no malice. That is so, eh?”
-
-“None in the world!” cried the good fellow. “But I shall be much obliged
-if you will give me directions how to get home from the Acropolis in
-Athens to Brixton. I have no money to speak of, and a large hole in my
-right boot.”
-
-“That will be all right, sir,” said Brentin, rising, with his grand air.
-“Henceforth you are our guest. By-gones are by-gones, and we will look
-after you till you are safely landed at Charing Cross.”
-
-“Thence, by tram or ’bus, over Westminster Bridge,” murmured Hines, as
-we all rose, shook ourselves, and prepared to descend.
-
-“Well, all’s well that ends well,” cried Thompson. “But, all the same, I
-rather regret, for all our sakes, the Monte Carlo business was left
-untried.”
-
-“Some other day, sir,” said Brentin; “some other day, when you are
-enjoying your well-earned retirement, and an officer not quite so plaguy
-sharp is in your place.”
-
-The pleased detective walked jauntily on in front with the rest, while
-Brentin, my sister, and I followed, Lucy clinging fondly to my arm.
-
-“But what are you going to do with him?” I whispered. “It is ingenious
-to let him suppose the thing has not been done; but once he gets on
-board the yacht he’s bound to discover all, and that he’s been fooled
-again. Then it will be all up, indeed!”
-
-“Some of you must take him home overland, on the pretence there isn’t
-room for every one on the _Amaranth_.”
-
-“But he must find it all out directly he gets to England, mustn’t he?”
-said Lucy, softly.
-
-“I hope to goodness he won’t come trooping over to Medworth Square,” my
-sister observed. “I shall never hear the last of it from Frank. And,
-after all, I’ve done nothing, have I?”
-
-“True, O queen!” muttered Brentin, knitting his brows. “But by the time
-he gets back the scent will be fairly cold. And the Casino authorities
-are taking the sensible course of ignoring the whole affair. That is so,
-isn’t it? No doubt, you’ve seen the papers.”
-
-Yes, I said, I had, and that was their line.
-
-“There you are, then! For the rest, we must simply trust our luck. It
-has stood by us pretty well so far. Oh, and, by-the-way, what about Mr.
-Parsons? How did you manage to get him out?”
-
-I rapidly sketched my part in the affair, and made them all laugh
-amazingly as I told them of my disguise and its accidental resemblance
-to Lord B.
-
-“Whether we are drunken men or fools,” laughed Brentin, “I know not; but
-Providence has certainly looked after us so far in a way that I may
-fairly call the most favored nation clause.”
-
-“_Quoti moris minus est, eo minus est periculi!_” I quoted, somehow
-happening to remember the sentence from my old Latin grammar. “Which is
-the Latin, ladies, for ‘Where there is the less fear, there is the less
-danger.’”
-
-Lucy pressed my arm and smiled happily.
-
-Just as we neared the carriages:
-
-“By-the-way,” I asked, “what did it all tote up to?”
-
-“The boodle?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Just over one million four hundred and fifty thousand francs; roughly
-speaking, fifty-eight thousand pounds of your money.”
-
-“You’ll be back in Wharton Park, dearest,” I whispered, “before the
-swallow dares!”
-
-She pressed my arm again and smiled more happily than ever.
-
-“The only thing that troubles me,” said my sister, “is how on earth I am
-to establish an _alibi_ to Frank’s satisfaction, in case there’s a
-rumpus when we get back.”
-
-“_Alibis_ are old-fashioned nowadays,” I answered. “We shall have to
-think of something else for you than an _alibi_.”
-
-The unsuspicious Bailey Thompson was standing at one of the carriage
-doors in a dandified attitude, making himself agreeable to Miss Rybot.
-
-As we drove away he again said—for after all he was human and meant to
-be malicious—“But I do really wonder you didn’t do it, gentlemen, after
-all!”
-
-“Don’t torture us with remorse, Mr. Bailey Thompson, sir,” Brentin
-cried; “the sense of neglected opportunity is hard to bear.”
-
-“Well, all I can say is, I never saw an easier bit of work in my life,
-and in my absence you were really perfectly safe. Those French police
-are such utter fools, and as likely as not the Casino people would have
-let you off. Come, now, confess! Don’t you regret it?”
-
-“Sir,” said Brentin, loftily, “I regret nothing, and never did. All is
-for the best in the best of all possible worlds.”
-
-And the good detective couldn’t understand why, a few moments later,
-Brentin was seized with a great roar of laughter. He explained it was
-from seeing “Κοῦκ” in Greek letters over Cook’s offices; it looked so
-droll! We all laughed heartily, too, and so drove up in immense mirth
-and spirits to our hotel.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
- WE ARRIVE SAFE IN LONDON AND GO TO MEDWORTH SQUARE—BACK AT “THE
- FRENCH HORN”—NEWS AT LAST OF THE _AMARANTH_—I INTERVIEW MR.
- CRAGE AND FIND HIM ILL
-
-
-VERY little remains to tell; but that little is of importance. Of our
-journey home together (my sister, Lucy, Bailey Thompson, Parsons, and I,
-the others sailing on board the yacht) I need say nothing, for it was
-entirely pleasant and uneventful. Our luggage wasn’t even robbed on the
-Italian lines; we felt the cold somewhat as we neared home, and that was
-all.
-
-At Charing Cross Thompson was evidently well-known to the officials; he
-proclaimed us all his friends and above suspicion, so our portmanteaus
-were barely looked at; everybody touched their hats to him, and we felt
-quite royal in our immunities.
-
-There we parted. Teddy jumped into a cab for Euston, to catch the night
-express for his dear Southport; my sister, Lucy, and I went off in a
-four-wheeler to Medworth Square; while the still unsuspicious Thompson
-remained on the platform, bowing and smiling. Once safely landed at
-Charing Cross, our duty to him was plainly at an end. No doubt he would
-immediately go off to Brixton, find his sister, Mrs. Wingham, and learn
-the truth; but what that might mean to us I really neither knew nor
-cared. We had so far so brilliantly succeeded that readers must not
-blame me if I continued obstinately optimistic, and believed, whatever
-trouble might still be in store for us, we should certainly somehow
-emerge from it scathless and joyous.
-
-“I hope,” my sister said, as we drove away, “he won’t think it rude of
-me not asking him to come and call. After all, he’s not quite of our
-world, and he would need such a deal of explaining, for Frank always
-insists on knowing exactly who everybody is.”
-
-“He won’t think of coming of his own accord, I suppose?” whispered Lucy.
-“And, oh! I do so wish he wasn’t a friend of Mr. Crage’s.”
-
-“Lor’ bless you!” I philosophically remarked, “it’s even money we none
-of us ever see or hear of him again.”
-
-But we did, that day week exactly, when he turned up at “The French
-Horn,” purple with ineffective rage, accompanied by his dazed French
-_confrère_, Monsieur Cochefort.
-
-In Medworth Square all was as usual. The Thursday evening German band
-was playing the usual selection from that tiresome old “Mikado,” and my
-sweet niece Mollie was soon tearing down the stairs to welcome us.
-
-“She watch for you every night, ma’am,” her Welsh nurse said; “and last
-night she go down-stairs her best, and blow up Mr. Blyth like anything
-for doing a door-bell ring exactly like yours, ma’am.”
-
-My brother-in-law was very glad to get his wife back, and, having been
-warned by letter, welcomed my dear Lucy with sufficient warmth. How
-could he help it? Everywhere she went she won all hearts. Brentin and
-Parsons both admired her desperately, and Bob Hines, my sister told me,
-paid her more attention on the yacht coming from Monte Carlo than he had
-ever been known to pay any one before.
-
-Even Forsyth, who is one of the most _difficile_ men I know (unless the
-young lady makes a dead set at him, when he thinks her lovely), even he
-said to me, “That’s a real pretty girl, Vincent, and you’re a very lucky
-man to get her;” while Miss Rybot once quite surprised me by the warmth
-of her congratulation. “She’s so fresh and unaffected, Mr. Blacker,” she
-said. “She’s like a breeze that meets you at the end of a country lane
-when you come suddenly upon the sea.” Which I thought both poetical and
-perfectly true—rather a rare combination nowadays.
-
-The next morning Lucy and I were off to Liverpool Street for Nesshaven
-and “The French Horn.” As we drove up, and I saw the familiar place once
-more, blinking in the soft February sunshine, just as we had left it, I
-could scarcely believe all I had gone through in the way of peril and
-adventure. Somehow, if one leaves a place for a time, and has
-experiences of moment in the interval, one expects those experiences to
-have had their effect elsewhere, too, even on inanimate objects.
-
-I felt older, wiser, more developed, more of a man, and I was astonished
-to find the place quite unaltered and Mr. Thatcher looking just the same
-as he came running out in his dirty old blazer. His mother was at the
-window, gazing through the panes with the naïve curiosity of a child at
-new arrivals. She kissed Lucy, and said to me: “Well, here you are back
-safe, you bad young man. You’ve given us a rare fright, I can tell
-you”—and that was all.
-
-That same evening, when the ladies were safely abed, I had a long talk
-with Mr. Thatcher in the bar parlor. After dear Lucy’s escapade, we
-decided we might as well be married at once, without waiting for Easter;
-and that, with the help of a license, the following Thursday, February
-6th, would be none too soon. For myself, apart from other
-considerations, I thought it clearly wisest to get married and clear out
-of the country, on a lengthy wedding-tour, as quick as we could; so
-that, in case of search being made for me, as the head and guiding
-spirit of the raid, I might, for some few months at any rate, be _non
-inventus_.
-
-Next, I delicately approached the subject of the repurchase of Wharton
-Park. I told Mr. Thatcher we had been extraordinarily lucky at Monte
-Carlo, and that, by a combination of rare circumstances, I was the
-richer by £30,000 than when I started. He was shrewd enough to listen in
-silence and ask no sort of question as to what particular system I had
-pursued to enable me to return with so large a sum. In fact, I scarcely
-gave him time to ask questions, I was so rapid, hurrying forward only to
-the main point, whether Crage’s offer were still open and we should
-still be able to get the old wretch out.
-
-He told me that since Crage’s last visit and offer to marry Lucy he had
-seen nothing of him, and, so far as he knew, the place was still to be
-had. We could, if I liked, go up to the house in a day or two and make
-inquiries cautiously, or write Crage a letter making him a formal
-proposal.
-
-To which I replied that, knowing something of human nature, I judged it
-best, when we made our offer, to be prepared with the actual sum in
-notes and gold to make it good; for, with a man like Crage, combined of
-malice and craft, he would most likely try to bluff and raise us unless
-he saw the very gold and notes before him, beyond which, not having any
-more to offer, we were not prepared to go.
-
-“Very true,” said Thatcher. “There’s nothing like the ready to tempt a
-man, as I know very well. Why, when I was in business—”
-
-“Then all we can do,” I continued, cutting him short, “is to wait in
-patience till the boodle—”
-
-“The what?” said Thatcher, taking the pipe out of his mouth.
-
-“It’s an American term—the money we have won, arrives. It’s coming in
-the yacht, and should be here in a day or two now. Then we’ll go up with
-it to the house, in a bag, and spread it out on the table—”
-
-“And I shall be back in Wharton Park again!” cried Thatcher. “Gracious
-powers! Who would have thought it possible? And, of course, it will be
-settled on Lucy. Me for life, and then Lucy. How delighted my poor old
-mother will be!”
-
-“Yes,” I said, “and that your name may be perpetuated, I will add it to
-my own. Father-in-law, here’s health and prosperity to those two fine
-old English families, the Thatcher-Blackers!”
-
-So there was nothing we could do but wait in patience for the arrival of
-the _Amaranth_. It was tedious, anxious work, for though I never doubted
-all would be well, yet Bailey Thompson’s portentous silence somewhat
-alarmed me; and as the days passed, and neither he nor the yacht gave
-any sign of their existence, my nerves began to get unstrung, and I grew
-worn and irritable.
-
-Fortunately, as often happens in the early days of February, the weather
-was beautifully fine; so fine that the more flatulent class of
-newspapers were full of letters from country correspondents, who were
-finding hedge-sparrows’ eggs and raspberries in their gardens, and the
-usual Lincolnshire parson broke into jubilant twitterings over his dish
-of green pease. Otherwise, I don’t think I really could have borne it.
-
-At last, late on the Tuesday evening, came a telegram from Brentin at
-Southampton—“_Safe, will arrive to-morrow_”—and I began to breathe a
-little easier. But not a word of any sort from Bailey Thompson, neither
-a reproach nor a threat; till I felt like that Damocles of Syracuse who,
-though seated on a throne, was yet immediately under a faintly suspended
-sword. For here was I, on a throne, indeed—the throne of dear Lucy’s
-pure and constant affection—and yet!—at any moment!—
-
-Dramatically enough, the sword fell on my very wedding morning—on its
-flat side, happily—giving me a shock, but no cut of any sort, as I am
-now briefly going to tell.
-
-The next morning came another telegram from Brentin in London, to say he
-would arrive at six and beg he might be met. All was well, he wired,
-adding “_Any news Thompson?_”
-
-I wired back to the “Victoria” there was none: “_bring boodle with
-you_;” and then I went off and found Thatcher.
-
-For always I had had the fancy to pay old Crage out of the place and be
-married on the same day, and here was now my chance. We were to be
-married in Nesshaven Church, in the grounds of Wharton Park, at twelve;
-what was to prevent us, I said to Thatcher, from walking on up to the
-house first with £30,000, completing the purchase, and hasting to the
-wedding afterwards? Thence back to “The French Horn” for a light lunch,
-afterwards catch the half-past-two train for Liverpool Street, and so to
-Folkestone in the evening.
-
-There was nothing to prevent it, said Thatcher, who for the last two
-days had gone about in a triumphant, bulging white waistcoat; only it
-would require rather delicate handling, all to be done successfully.
-Crage should be prepared, for instance, he thought; for, notwithstanding
-the sight of the money, the sight of dear Lucy in her happy wedding
-radiance might turn him sour, and he might after all refuse to complete.
-What was to prevent one of us, he said—meaning, of course, me—going up
-to the house and sounding the old man first? Then we should know exactly
-how we stood, and what chance there was of our money being accepted.
-
-Now, for the last week nothing had been seen of the old man, and rumors
-had reached us, chiefly through the gardener, he was very ill. He hadn’t
-been to church for more than a month, and at church he had always been a
-very regular attendant; not so much because he had any real religion in
-him as that he might aggravate the parson by catching him up loudly in
-the responses, and barking his way harshly through the hymns a good
-half-line behind the rest of the congregation. Indeed, the chief
-attraction, I fear, at Nesshaven Church was old Crage and his nauseous
-eccentricities, and people who had heard how he had once lighted up his
-pipe during the sermon and sat there sucking at it in the Wharton pew,
-came from miles round in the hope he would enliven the discourse by
-doing it again.
-
-Nor had he been seen about the grounds, nor stumping down to the inn, as
-he mostly did once a week to insult the inmates; in short, the end that
-comes to us all—good, bad, and indifferent—was clearly coming now to
-him, and if business were ever to be done, it must be done speedily and
-at once.
-
-So, before Brentin came, early on the Wednesday afternoon, I trudged
-alone up to the house. There wasn’t a sign of life in it, and when I
-rang at the hall door I heard the heavy bell clanging away down the
-empty passages and cold servants’ quarters as in the depths of an
-Egyptian tomb. I rang and rang, until at last I heard shuffling
-footsteps approach. From the other side of the door came stertorous
-breathing and wheezing, and the undoing of a chain; then a burglar’s
-bell was taken off and fell with a jangle on the stone floor inside, and
-at last the door was pulled ajar.
-
-Poor old Crage! He looked out at me with his wicked, frightened old
-face, pinched, haggard, unshaven, dirty; terror-struck, as though he
-feared, I were Death himself who had been knocking at the door. He was
-in his shirt and trousers and a frowzy old dressing-gown, and his bare,
-bony feet were thrust in worn leather slippers. As he breathed his
-throat rattled dismally, and his long hand, with the thick, muddy veins,
-shook so he couldn’t fold the dressing-gown round his gaunt, corded,
-bare throat.
-
-“Hullo, young cockney!” he croaked; “what’s to do?”
-
-“How are you, Mr. Crage?” I asked, shocked at the old man’s fallen,
-forlorn look.
-
-“Very bad!” he whispered, his rheumy eyes blinking with watery
-self-pity.
-
-“Is there anybody looking after you?”
-
-“No—no—thieves! all thieves!—don’t want ’em.”
-
-Then he made as if he would shut the door.
-
-“I came up to see you on business,” I said; “about selling the house.”
-
-“No business to-day,” he croaked. “Too ill. Come to-morrow—any time.
-Come to-morrow.” And with that he shut the door in my face.
-
-I heard him shuffling away across the hall, kicking the fallen bell with
-a tinkle along the floor, and then, as I turned to go, I heard him fall
-and groan. I ran in hastily, and with great difficulty managed to get
-him on his feet again. He stood there for some few minutes, clutching me
-and rattling his throat; then, hanging on my arm, dragging me along with
-him, he paddled off down a short dark passage towards a half-open door,
-pushed it wide, and pulled me after him into the great empty
-drawing-room.
-
-The blinds were down, and the fading February sun gleamed in on the bare
-worn carpet. In front of the fine fireplace, with a little dying
-wood-fire in it, stood an arm-chair, with a small table beside it. A
-candle and snuffers were on it, and a plate of stale bread-and-butter.
-On the high mantel-piece was a medicine bottle, full and corked.
-
-He sank back into his chair, and lay there, breathing heavily, with his
-eyes closed.
-
-“But is there nobody looking after you?” I asked, and he made some
-twitching movement with his fingers.
-
-Just at that moment in flounced the gardener’s wife, drying her hands on
-her apron. She was a big, handsome, shameless-looking creature, with a
-naming eye and a hard, high color on her stiff cheeks.
-
-“Now you’ve been moving yourself about again!” she cried, bending over
-him.
-
-Crage opened his eyes and looked up at her maliciously.
-
-“He came up on business,” he whispered.
-
-“You’re a pretty man to do business, ain’t you?” she sneered.
-
-“No, not to-day,” he mocked. “Too ill. All right to-morrow. Tell the
-genelman to come to-morrow, early. Quite well to-morrow.”
-
-I turned to go, and Crage, raising himself in his chair, rasped out:
-
-“Bring the money with you, young cockney, or no business. Mind that!”
-
-The woman followed me to the door.
-
-“Has he got a doctor?” I asked.
-
-“Doctor Hall came once,” she said, “but he won’t do anything he tells
-him. He won’t take his medicine and he won’t go to bed. He says he’ll
-die if he goes to bed. He sleeps all night in that arm-chair in the
-drawing-room. If he don’t die soon, I shall; I know that very well. If
-you’ve got any business to do with him, you’d better come early in the
-morning. He can’t last much longer.”
-
-And with that she closed the door on me, and I heard her putting up the
-chain again and the burglar’s bell as I went away down the weedy gravel
-path.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
- ARRIVAL OF BRENTIN—MY WEDDING-DAY—WE GO TO WHARTON—BAILEY
- THOMPSON AND COCHEFORT FOLLOW US—WE FINALLY DEFEAT THEM BOTH
-
-
-BRENTIN was in “The French Horn” by a quarter to seven, and, rather to
-my surprise, he came alone. I thought Hines or Masters would surely have
-come with him; but no, he said, except for Forsyth, they had all parted
-company at Southampton. Masters and Miss Rybot had gone to Sea View,
-where they were to be married almost immediately, and Hines had gone off
-to stay with a married sister at Bournemouth. Forsyth alone had
-travelled up to town with him, and then gone on straight to Colchester
-to take up his neglected regimental duties. So I wrote out a telegram to
-be sent first thing in the morning, begging him to come over and be my
-best man.
-
-And the boodle? Brentin winked and, with his hands on his knees, began
-to laugh, like the priest in the _Bonne Histoire_.
-
-“Some of it has melted, sir,” he joyously cried. “Your friend Hines has
-got his, and Mr. Parsons, by this time, is toying with ay registered
-letter way up in Southport. I have handsomely recompensed Captain Evans
-and the crew; they have, no doubt, been tanking-up and painting
-Portsmouth red all the time. I have reimbursed myself for the yacht and
-other trifles, and there now remains the £30,000 for your young lady’s
-ancestral home, and some £20,000 for the hospitals and so on. To-morrow,
-sir, we will draw up a list of the most deserving of them.”
-
-“You have the money with you?”
-
-“Yes,” he said; it was all safe in what he called his grip, or hand-bag,
-and quite at my service. I told him of my desire to complete the
-purchase immediately before the marriage was solemnized, and then we
-fell to talking of Bailey Thompson and his strange silence.
-
-“Why, the man is piqued, sir,” said Brentin; “that’s what he is, piqued.
-Beyond saying that, I do not propose to give him ay second thought. He
-is mad piqued, and that’s all there is to it!”
-
-So I tried to feel completely at my ease, and managed to spend a very
-happy evening in the bar parlor, Lucy playing to us and Brentin
-occasionally bursting into raucous song. Now, when I think of him, I
-like best to remember him as he was that evening, forgetting his harder,
-commoner side, when he so outrageously proposed to desert poor Teddy;
-even refusing (as I forgot at the time to mention) to allow the cannon
-to be brought into play for his rescue by shelling the rooms. He was
-infinitely gay and amusing, only finishing up the evening, after dear
-Lucy’s retirement, with a long and violent dispute with Mr. Thatcher on
-the vague subject of the immortality of the soul. Thatcher believed he
-had a soul and would live forever, in another, happier sphere; Brentin
-denied it, could see no sign of Thatcher’s soul anywhere; so I left them
-trying to shout each other down, both speaking at once.
-
-I retired to rest with many solemn, touching thoughts. The last night of
-bachelorhood gives rise to at least as much deep reflection as that of
-the young maiden’s; more, in fact, so far as the bachelor himself is
-concerned. I thought over it all so long and deeply I at last got
-confused, and when I woke, the bright February sun was streaming in on
-my best clothes and the bells from Nesshaven Church were ringing.
-
-All the morning those bells rang out their happy, irregular peal.
-
- “The village church beneath the trees,
- Where first our marriage vows were given,
- With merry peal shall swell the breeze,
- And point with slender spire to heaven!”
-
-Only, to be exact, Nesshaven Church has no spire, but a sunk, old,
-bird-haunted, ivy-clad tower.
-
-It was Thatcher’s idea to set the bells going early and keep them at it
-all day; you see, they rang not only for the marriage of his only child,
-but for his return to their ancestral home; and, when they showed any
-sign of flagging, Thatcher listened with a pained expression, and cried,
-“Why, surely they’re not going to stop yet! Run, Bobby, or Harriet, or
-George, my man!”—or whoever happened to be handy—“and tell ’em to keep
-’em going, and give ’em this from me. Here, Vincent, my boy, have you
-got half-a-crown?”
-
-By ten o’clock we were all dressed and ready, waiting only for Forsyth.
-Soon after ten he came, and the procession started. It was a lovely day
-again, mild and sunny, and, in true country-wedding fashion, we all set
-out to walk. Lucy, looking perfectly sweet in gray, was on her father’s
-arm, and the old lady, in black silk, on mine; while Brentin, carrying
-his grip, with the boodle in it, and that good little chap, Forsyth,
-brought up the rear.
-
-The old lady, who within the last three months seemed to me to have
-failed a good deal, mentally, at any rate, stepped out right well,
-hanging lightly on my arm. At first she thought we were going straight
-to the church, and couldn’t understand why we left it on our right and
-went on up to the big house. Then she seemed to think it quite natural,
-and that the place was hers again, and began talking of her early days,
-when first she was married and came to Wharton as a bride. Once or
-twice, indeed, she called me “Francis,” her husband’s name, who died in
-1850, and drew my attention to the scandalous, weedy state of the walks.
-
-“And this is what we pay good wages for!” she cried. “These men must be
-spoken to about it, my dear, immediately.”
-
-The gardener’s wife, who opened for us the hall door, was astonished at
-our numbers.
-
-“Why, what a crowd of you!” she said.
-
-The old lady passed her haughtily.
-
-“Come, Tom!” she cried to Mr. Thatcher. “We’ll go up-stairs and have tea
-in _my_ room. Come, Lucy!”
-
-And up-stairs, up the bare stone staircase, they went, for, as I
-whispered to Thatcher, it was just as well the ladies should be out of
-the way while we did our business.
-
-In the great empty drawing-room we found old Crage ready waiting for us.
-He had dressed himself up in rusty attorney black for the occasion, and
-the plain kitchen-table was neatly spread with bundles of documents,
-title-deeds, and so forth.
-
-As the woman showed us in, she told me he had been up all night
-rummaging in his old tin boxes, talking and mumbling to himself. Now he
-seemed quite spry and well again. I could scarcely believe, as he sat
-there alert and attentive, he was the same stricken, shambling old hunks
-I had seen the previous afternoon, dragging himself about, senile and
-dying. Such is the power of the will and the business instinct,
-prolonged even to the verge of the grave!
-
-Brentin, who, as usual, took everything into his own hands, adopted the
-simplest method of dealing with him. Crage received us in complete
-silence, and no one spoke a word, while Brentin opened his grip and took
-out the notes and two or three little bags of gold. The gold he emptied
-into heaps and piled them round the notes.
-
-Then, “Thirty thousand pounds,” he said, with a smile—“thirty thousand
-pounds! Is it a deal?”
-
-Crage sat bolt upright, with his hand curved over his ear.
-
-“For the entire property?” he asked.
-
-“For the entire property. Is it a deal? Thirty thousand pounds, neither
-less nor more.” And he emptied the grip and shook it, to show that not a
-penny more remained.
-
-“It’s worth more in the open market,” said Crage, cautiously.
-
-“Then take it to the open market. We have no time to haggle. My client
-is on his way to be married. Good-day.” And with that he began to scrape
-the notes and gold together again.
-
-“Hold hard!” cried Crage. “Don’t hurry an old man.”
-
-“We’ll give the old man three minutes,” said Brentin, coolly pulling out
-his watch.
-
-We were all three of us grouped round the table, watching Crage, with
-our backs to the door. The woman stood at his elbow, and we could, in
-the complete silence, hear the heavy, swinging tick-tick of Brentin’s
-large old-fashioned watch.
-
-“Half time!” cried Brentin, when suddenly we heard steps outside in the
-hall. I had just time to recognize Bailey Thompson’s even, divisional
-tread, when he pushed the door open and stepped in. He was dressed as
-usual, and behind him came a gentleman in a tight black frock-coat, an
-evident Frenchman, thin, dark, and wiry, with a withered face, like a
-preserved Bordeaux plum.
-
-“One moment, if—you—please, gentlemen!” cried Bailey Thompson, as he
-stepped up to the table.
-
-My heart gave a bound, and Forsyth started and said, “Ho!” but the
-unabashed Brentin merely politely replied, “One moment to _you_, sir. We
-will attend to you directly.—Time’s up, Mr. Crage! is it or is it not a
-deal?”
-
-Bailey Thompson laughed. “Cool as ever, Mr. Brentin, I see,” he said.
-“But don’t you think this amusing farce of yours has gone on long
-enough? It has been successful so far, as I always thought it would be!”
-
-“You’re mighty good!”
-
-“We have no desire to be unduly hard on you.”
-
-“You are mighty particular good!”
-
-“The Casino authorities are, on the whole, willing to regard you as
-eccentric English gentlemen of position, who have played a very cruel
-practical joke on them.”
-
-“That so?”
-
-“That is so. This is their representative, Mossieu Cochefort.”
-
-“_Enchantay!_” cried Brentin, with a bow.
-
-“He is charged to say that, on the due return of the money you have
-sto—ahem!—carried off, and an undertaking from you in writing that you
-none of you ever visit the place again, on any pretence, they are
-willing to forego criminal proceedings, and no further questions will be
-asked.”
-
-“Oh, come off it!” cried Brentin, laughing.
-
-“Otherwise,” continued Bailey Thompson, with great gravity, “I must ask
-you, Mr. Blacker, and Mr. Forsyth here, to follow me to the cab in
-waiting at the door, and return with us to London as our prisoners.”
-
-“In short, sir,” said Brentin, swelling with indignant importance, “you
-invite _us_, eccentric gentlemen of recognized position, to compound a
-felony!”
-
-Thompson shrugged his shoulders, and Mossieu Cochefort looked puzzled.
-
-“Be ashamed of yourself, sir!” Brentin cried, his voice ringing
-scornfully through the empty room. “Be ashamed of yourselves, you and
-Mossieu Cochefort, and give over talking through your hat! Mr. Crage, if
-you will write out a formal receipt we will look upon the affair as
-settled. The formal transfer can be effected later.”
-
-“Aye, aye!” mumbled Crage, and, with his eyes on the money, began
-fumbling in the inside pocket of his rusty black coat for the receipt.
-
-“Gentlemen!” cried Thompson, with affected earnestness, “I warn you! I
-very solemnly warn you—”
-
-“Oh, come off it, Mr. Bailey Thompson, sir!” was Brentin’s emphatic and
-withering reply; “come off it, and shut your head. We have long had
-enough of you and your gas. For my part, my earnest advice to you and
-Mossieu Cochefort is that you kiss yourselves good-bye and go your
-several ways. And tell your amazing Casino Company from us that the only
-undertaking we will give them is not to come and do it again in the
-fall. To repeat a success is always dangerous; and next time, no doubt,
-you will all be better prepared.—Now, Mr. Crage, the receipt!”
-
-“_Qu’est ce qu’il a dit?_” asked the puzzled Frenchman, as Thompson,
-fuming and fretting, dragged him off to the window to explain.
-
-Meantime old Crage had produced his receipt, already written and signed,
-and, handing it over, with trembling, eager fingers was beginning to
-count the notes.
-
-“Ten fifties—ten thousands—ten twenties,” he was mumbling, “nice clean
-notes—beautiful crisp notes—he won’t get ’em back from me, if that’s
-what he’s after! No, no, not from Crage. Crage wasn’t in Clement’s Inn
-for forty years for nothing. Ten more fifties!—” So he went on mumbling
-to himself, and stuffing the notes away in a broken old pocket-book,
-while Brentin handed me over the receipt, and snapped his grip with a
-click.
-
-“It’s all right,” he whispered. “We’ve bluffed ’em. Keep cool.”
-
-“Hadn’t you better let me keep ’em for you!” whined the woman, bending
-over Crage’s chair. “You’ll only lose ’em. Give ’em me to take care of
-for you, there’s a dearie!”
-
-To which pathetic appeal the old man paid no sort of heed, but pushed
-the pocket-book into his inside breast-pocket, with many senile signs of
-satisfaction and joy.
-
-“And now!” cried Brentin, in imperturbable high spirits, “the
-wedding-procession will reform, and proceed to the church for the tying
-of the sacred knot. Mr. Bailey Thompson—Mossieu Cochefort—we shall be
-glad if you will join us, and afterwards, at ‘The French Horn,’ to a
-slight but high-toned repast. Good-day, Mr. Crage; take care of yourself
-and your money. Let us hope that when the robins nest they will find you
-in your usual robust health. Mossieu Cochefort—Mr. Bailey Thompson—if
-you will kindly follow us—”
-
-But a sudden access of fury seemed to have seized the usually calm
-little detective; he was stamping his feet, waving his arms, almost
-foaming at the mouth.
-
-In execrable French, Stratford-atte-Bow-Street French, he began to swear
-aloud he would have nothing more to do with it, that he had done his
-best, that he had never yet had dealings with the French police but they
-hadn’t muddled it; for his part, his work was finished, and he was going
-home.
-
-“Here they are!” he cried, “three of them, all ready for you. Will you
-have them, or won’t you? _Les voilar! Nong? Vous ne les voulay pas?_
-Then if you don’t want them, why the ——” (dreadful bad word!) “did you
-bring me off down here?” he yelled, breaking into profane English.
-
-“_Mais, voyons! voyons!_” murmured the startled and conciliatory
-Cochefort.
-
-“Damn your _voyons_!” Bailey Thompson screamed. “If you don’t want them,
-and won’t take them, do the rest of it yourself, the best way you can. I
-wash my hands of it. Good-day, gentlemen, and thank your lucky stars for
-the imbecility of the French police!” and with that he rushed to the
-door, through the hall, and out into his cab. As he pulled the hall door
-open I heard the wedding-bells come surging in with a new burst of joy.
-
-“_Mais, mon ami!_” cried Cochefort, as Thompson tore himself away, “_ne
-me laissez pas comme ça!_” and with much gesticulation prepared to
-follow.
-
-But Brentin sagely stopped him. “_Restay, Mossieu Cochefort!_” he said,
-graciously; “_Restay avec nous. Tout va biang. Restay!_”
-
-“_Mais, quel cochon!_” cried the angry Cochefort, stretching out his
-black kid hands, and shaking them in Bailey Thompson’s direction. “_Ma
-parole d’honneur! a t’on jamais vu un pareil sacré cochon!_”
-
-“_C’est vrai!_” said Brentin. “_Mais il est toujours comme ça. Vous
-savvy, il n’est pas gentilhomme. Nous sommes tous gentilhommes. Nous
-vous garderong et vous traiterong tray biang. Restay!_”
-
-So Mossieu Cochefort allowed himself to be comforted, and restay’d. We
-took him with us to the church, and did him right well at lunch, and
-then, so forlorn and downcast the poor creature seemed, Lucy and I
-carried him off with us up to town, if only out of kindness, to put him
-on his way back to Monaco.
-
-On the way up in the train he confessed to me his only instructions had
-been to try and get the money back, and that if he couldn’t manage that,
-or part of it, he was directed not to think of embarrassing the
-authorities by taking us all in charge. I could conceive, he said, that
-the authorities didn’t want to be made the laughing-stock of Europe by
-having to try us, nor to add to their already heavy expenses by keeping
-us in prison—nearly all quite young men—for the term of our natural
-lives. He hadn’t been able fully to explain all this to Bailey Thompson:
-the man was such a lunatic, he said, and so obstinate: and besides, from
-the moment of his arrival Bailey Thompson had ridden the high horse over
-him, and proudly declaring he didn’t require to be taught his duties by
-a foreigner, had immediately carried him off down to Nesshaven, scarcely
-allowing him once to open his mouth all the way.
-
-At Liverpool Street he seemed more lost, poor wretch, than ever. He knew
-no single word of English, and looked at us so pathetically, as we stood
-on the platform together, our soft hearts were touched. So we made up
-our minds to carry him along with us to Folkestone, dine him at the
-“Pavilion,” and afterwards see him safe on board the night-boat for
-Boulogne.
-
-It was droll, all the same, this carrying a French detective about with
-us on our wedding-day; but the man was so truly grateful I have never
-regretted it. We gave him a good dinner at the hotel, and at ten o’clock
-walked him out on to the pier for his boat. He made me a little speech
-at parting, declaring I had treated him “_en vrai camarade_,” and that
-if ever I wanted to come to Monte Carlo again I was to let him know and
-he would see I came to no harm. To Lucy he presented all his compliments
-and felicitations on securing the affection of “_un si galant homme!_”
-and then, with a twenty-pound note I slipped into his hand at parting,
-bowed himself away, and was soon lost to sight in the purlieus of the
-second cabin, whither he went prepared to be dreadfully sick, smooth and
-calm as the night was.
-
-As Lucy and I strolled back to the hotel, arm-in-arm, we both were
-silent.
-
-At last, just as we got back and heard the steamer’s final clanging bell
-and despairing whistle, “I can’t make out, really, whether you’ve all
-done right or wrong,” she whispered, softly; “but this I know, dearest,
-you have been most extraordinarily lucky.”
-
-To which simple little speech I merely pressed her arm, by way of
-showing how thoroughly I agreed with her.
-
-
-
-
- CONCLUSION
-
-
-THIS is the true account of our raiding the tables at Monte Carlo, done
-the best way I could.
-
-For the rest, I may just mention poor old Crage died before the end of
-the month, and by Easter Mr. Thatcher and his mother were safely
-installed in Wharton Park. Arthur Masters was married to Miss Rybot in
-April, Forsyth is to do the same to a widow (so he says) in September,
-Bob Hines is very flourishing with his new gymnasium and
-swimming-bath—just about finished now, as I write, at the end of
-June—and Parsons is, I believe, at Southport, parading Lord Street as
-usual in breeches and gaiters.
-
-As for Brentin, I never saw him again, for by the time Lucy and I had
-returned from our honeymoon he was back in New York. But I heard from
-him the other day—a long, rambling letter, in which he told me he had
-sold the _Amaranth_ to Van Ginkel, for his wife the Princess Danleno,
-whom he had remarried, and with whom, on separate vessels, he was
-sailing about the Greek Archipelago—probably in belated search for
-Bailey Thompson. He concluded by begging me to think of something
-“snappy” we could do together in the fall, ending finally by writing:
-“What’s the matter with our going to Egypt and turning the Nile into the
-Red Sea? A communicative stranger, an Englishman, by his accent, assures
-me there is just one place where it can be done. Think it over, sonny,
-and if you decide to do it, count on me. Sincerely, =Julius C.
-Brentin=.”
-
-I would write more, only Lucy is calling to me from the hay-field, the
-other side of the ha-ha of Wharton, where I have come to finish this
-work in retirement.
-
- “Around my ivied porch shall cling
- Each fragrant flower that drinks the dew,
- And Lucy at her wheel shall sing
- In russet gown with ’kerchief blue.”
-
-As my dear Lucy says, I really am, and always have been, a most
-extraordinarily lucky man.
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER NOTES
-
-
-Misspelled words and printer errors have been corrected. Some words are
-hyphenated by the author for emphasis.
-
-Inconsistencies in punctuation have been maintained.
-
-Italicized words are surrounded by underline
-characters, _like this_. Words in bold characters are surrounded by
-equal signs, =like this=.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Sack of Monte Carlo, by Walter Frith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Sack of Monte Carlo
- An Adventure of To-day
-
-Author: Walter Frith
-
-Release Date: November 20, 2015 [EBook #50515]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SACK OF MONTE CARLO ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Cindy Beyer, Shaun Pinder and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
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-</pre>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='cover' id='iid-0000' style='width:350px;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div class="title-page">
-<div><h1>THE SACK OF MONTE CARLO</h1></div>
-
-<div class='lgc' style=''> <!-- rend=';fs:.8em;' -->
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:1em;'><span class='bold'>An Adventure of To-day</span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>As narrated by Vincent Blacker, Esq.</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>Lieutenant H.M.’s East ——shire Militia</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>BY</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:1em;'>WALTER FRITH</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-top:.5em;font-size:.8em;'>AUTHOR OF “IN SEARCH OF QUIET”</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='blockquoter8'>
-
-<div class='literal-container' style=''><div class='literal'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Quo timoris minus est, eo minus est Periculi</span></p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Livy</span>, xii., 5</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end rend -->
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-</div>
-
-<div class='lgc' style=''> <!-- rend=';fs:.8em;' -->
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/title.jpg' alt='title' id='iid-0001' style='width:80px;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>HARPER &amp; BROTHERS PUBLISHERS</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>NEW YORK AND LONDON</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>1898</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-top:8em;'><span class='sc'>By WALTER FRITH.</span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk100'/>
-<div class='blockquoter9'>
-
-<div class='literal-container' style=''><div class='literal'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>IN SEARCH OF QUIET. A Country Journal, May</p>
-<p class='line0'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;to July. Post 8vo, Cloth, $1.25.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A very entertaining book, written in a very entertaining</p>
-<p class='line0'>style.—<span class='it'>Cincinnati Commercial-Gazette.</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A book which will enchain the attention of the reader</p>
-<p class='line0'>from beginning to end.—<span class='it'>Boston Advertiser.</span></p>
-<hr class='tbk101'/>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;'><span style='font-size:smaller'>NEW YORK AND LONDON:</span></p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;'>HARPER &amp; BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='lgc' style='margin-top:4em;'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>Copyright, 1897, by <span class='sc'>Harper &amp; Brothers</span>.</p>
-<hr class='tbk102'/>
-<p class='line0'><span style='font-size:smaller'><span class='it'>All rights reserved.</span></span></p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style='margin-top:10em;'> <!-- rend=';fs:.8em;' -->
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>TO</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:1em;'><span class='sc'>Mrs. F. W. SHARON</span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>IN RECOLLECTION OF MANY HAPPY HOURS IN</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:1em;'>NEW YORK, ÉTRETAT, AND PARIS</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-bottom:10em;font-size:.8em;'>London, October, 1897</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><span style='font-size:x-large'>CONTENTS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='tbk103'/>
-
-<table id='tab1' summary='' class='center'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 25em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER I</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Some Slight Explanation—Objects of the Expedition—Love the Promoter—Lucy Thatcher—Her Portrait by Lamplight</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p1'>1</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER II</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>“The French Horn”—Mabel Harker: My Unfortunate Engagement to Her—Mr. Crage and Wharton Park</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p7'>7</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER III</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>I Continue to Keep Out of Mabel Harker’s Way and Go to Goring—Return to “The French Horn”—Wanderings with Lucy—Mr. Crage Rehearses His Own Funeral</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p17'>17</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER IV</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>I am Free of Mabel Harker—Return to “The French Horn”—Disastrous Interference of Harold Forsyth in My Affairs</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p25'>25</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER V</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Anglesey Lodge—My Interview with Lucy in Kensington Gardens—Not so Satisfactory as I could Desire</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p29'>29</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER VI</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Early Difficulties—I Fail to Persuade the Honorable Edgar Fanshawe, the Reverend Percy Blyth, and Mr. Parker White, M.P., to Join our Monte Carlo Party</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p37'>37</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER VII</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>I Interview Mr. Brentin—His Sympathy and Interest—Sir Anthony Hipkins and the Yacht <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>—We Determine to Look Over It</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p47'>47</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER VIII</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>We Go to Ryde—The <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>—Accidental Meeting with Arthur Masters and His Lady Friend—I Enroll Him Among Us, Provisionally—We Decide to Purchase the Yacht</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p60'>60</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER IX</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>My Sister’s Suspicions—Heroes of <span class='it'>The Argo</span>—My Sister Determines to Come with Us as Chaperon to Miss Rybot</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p70'>70</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER X</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Mr. Brentin’s Indiscretion—Lucy and I Make It Up—Bailey Thompson Appears in Church—On Christmas Day we Hold a Council of War</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p77'>77</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XI</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Mr. Bailey Thompson Gives us His Ingenious Advice—We are Fools enough to Trust Him—Misplaced Confidence</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p87'>87</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XII</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Monte Carlo—Mr. Van Ginkel’s Yacht <span class='it'>Saratoga</span>—We Prospect—Fortunate Discovery of the Point of Attack—First Visit to the Rooms</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p95'>95</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XIII</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Mrs. Wingham and Teddy Parsons—He Foolishly Confides in Her—I Make a Similar Mistake</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p103'>103</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XIV</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Arrival of the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>—All Well on Board—Their First Experience of the Rooms</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p111'>111</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XV</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Influence of Climate on Adventure—Unexpected Arrival of Lucy—Her Revelations—Danger Ahead</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p118'>118</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XVI</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Council of War—Captain Evans’s Decision—I Go to the Rooms and Confide in My Sister</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p127'>127</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XVII</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Enter Mr. Bailey Thompson—Van Ginkel Stands by Us—We Show Thompson Round and Explain Details—Teddy Parsons’s Alarm</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p136'>136</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XVIII</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Exit Mr. Bailey Thompson</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p146'>146</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XIX</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>The Great Night—Dinner at the “Hôtel de Paris”—A Last Look Round—The Sack and Its Incidents—Flight</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p151'>151</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XX</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>We Discover Teddy Parsons is Left Behind—I Make Up My Mind—To the Rescue!—Unmanly Conduct of the Others—I Go Alone—Disguise—The Garde Champêtre</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p171'>171</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XXI</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>In My Disguise I am Mistaken for Lord B.—A Club Acquaintance—Teddy at the Law Courts—Mrs. Wingham—The Defence and The Acquittal—We Bolt</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p185'>185</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XXII</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Our Flight to Venice—Thence to Athens—We all Meet on the Acropolis—Reappearance of Mr. Bailey Thompson!—Again we Manage to Put Him Off the Scent</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p202'>202</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XXIII</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>We Arrive Safe in London and Go to Medworth Square—Back at “The French Horn”—News at Last of the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>—I Interview Mr. Crage and Find Him Ill</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p219'>219</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XXIV</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>Arrival of Brentin—My Wedding-day—We Go to Wharton—Bailey Thompson and Cochefort Follow Us—We Finally Defeat Them Both</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p230'>230</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>CONCLUSION</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#p243'>243</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-top:10em;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:1.5em;'>THE SACK OF MONTE CARLO</p>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:10em;font-size:.8em;'>“<span class='it'>I don’t say that it is possible; I only affirm it to be true.</span>”</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p1'>CHAPTER I</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-SOME SLIGHT EXPLANATION—OBJECTS OF THE EXPEDITION—LOVE
-THE PROMOTER—LUCY THATCHER—HER PORTRAIT
-BY LAMPLIGHT
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>The</span> idea occurred to me, quite unexpectedly
-and unsought for, early one morning in bed;
-and, as ideas of such magnitude are valuable and
-scarce (at any rate, with me), it was not long before
-I determined to try and realize it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The expedition was so successful, and we got,
-on the whole, so clear and clean away with the
-swag, or, as Mr. Julius C. Brentin, our esteemed
-American <span class='it'>collaborateur</span>, called it, “the boodle,”
-that, for my part, there I should have been perfectly
-content to let the affair rest; but, the fact
-is, so many of my friends have taken upon themselves
-to doubt whether we really did it at all, and
-the Monte Carlo authorities from the very first
-so cunningly managed to suppress all details (with
-their subsidized press), that I feel it due to us all
-to try and write the adventure out; since I know
-very well how, with most, seeing in print is believing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Briefly, then, my idea was to sack or raid the
-gambling-tables at Monte Carlo, that highly notorious
-<span class='it'>cloaca maxima</span> for all the scum of Europe,
-which there gutters and gushes forth into
-the sapphire and tideless Mediterranean. I had
-worked details out for myself, and believed that,
-what with the money on the tables and the reserve
-in the vaults, there could not be much
-short of £200,000 on the Casino premises, a sum
-as much worth making a dash for, it seemed to
-me, as Spanish plate-ships to Drake or Raleigh.
-Nor did it seem likely we should have to do
-much fighting to secure it; for all the authorities
-I consulted assured me the place was by
-no means a Gibraltar, and, in fact, that half a
-dozen resolute gentlemen with revolvers and a
-swift steam-yacht waiting in the harbor would
-be more than enough to do the trick and clean
-the place out; which was pretty much what we
-found.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As for the morality of the affair, I confess <span class='it'>that</span>
-never in the least troubled me—never once. One
-puts morality on one side when dealing with a
-gaming-establishment, and to raid the place
-seemed to me just as reasonable and fair as to
-go there with a system, besides being likely to
-be a good deal more profitable. And since the
-objects to which we destined the money were in
-the main charitable, I soon came to regard the
-expedition strictly <span class='it'>in pios usus</span> (as lawyers say),
-and hope and believe the public will regard it in
-that light too.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Let me say right here—to quote Mr. Brentin
-again—that not one of us touched one single red
-cent of the large amount we so fortunately secured,
-but that it was all expended for the purposes
-(in the main, as I say, charitable) for which
-we had always intended it—with the single exception
-of a necklet of napoleons I had made for
-the fat little neck of my enchanting niece Mollie,
-which she always wears at parties, and keeps to
-this day in an old French plum-box, along with
-her beads and bangles and a small holy ring I
-once brought her from Rome; being amazingly
-fond of all sorts of bedizenments, as most female
-children are.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mollie, therefore, was the only person who
-really had any of the swag, or boodle; though, of
-course, she doesn’t know it, and thinks it was
-properly won at play. For as for Bob Hines,
-who had some for the new gymnasium and swimming-bath
-at his boys’ school at Folkestone; and
-Mr. Thatcher (my dear wife Lucy’s father), who
-got his old family estate, Wharton Park, back;
-and the hospitals, convalescent homes, and sanatoriums,
-which all shared alike; and Teddy Parsons,
-of my militia, who had the bill paid off that
-was worrying him—that was all in the original
-scheme, and all went to form the well-understood
-reasons for our undertaking the expedition; without
-which inducements, indeed, it would never
-even have started.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So if, after this clear denial in print, the public
-still choose to fancy anything has stuck to
-my fingers, all I can ask them in fairness to
-do is to come to our flat in Victoria Street any
-morning between twelve and two, when they can
-see the accounts and receipts for themselves, all
-in order and properly audited by Messrs. Fitch
-&amp; Black, the eminent accountants of Lothbury,
-E. C....</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, they say love is at the bottom of most
-of the affairs and enterprises of the world, and
-so I believe it mostly is. At all events, I don’t
-fancy I should have undertaken, or, at any rate,
-been so prominent in this Monte Carlo affair,
-if I hadn’t at the time been so deeply in love
-with Lucy, and correspondingly anxious to get
-her father’s property back for them at Wharton
-Park. It is situate near Nesshaven, on the
-Essex coast; which, though to many it may
-not be a particularly attractive part of the country,
-is to me forever sacred as the spot where I
-first met the dear girl who is now my wife,
-coming back so rosily from her morning bath,
-through the whin and the sand, from the long,
-flat shore and the idle sea, carrying her own
-damp towel back to her father’s inn, “The
-French Horn.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I can see her now as I saw her then, on that
-warm September morning eighteen months ago;
-sea and sky and monotonous Essex land all
-bathed in hazy sunshine, the whins still glistening
-with the morning mist, which at that time
-of the year lies heavily till the sun at mid-day
-warms them dry and sets the seed-cases exploding
-like Prince-Rupert drops—I can see her, I
-say, come towards me along the coast-guard
-path, round the pole that sticks up to mark it,
-and towards the wooden bridge that crosses one
-of the dikes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If any line of that sweet face were faint in my
-memory, I have only to look across at her now,
-as she sits sewing under the lamp as I write,
-for all its charm and perfection to be present as
-first I saw it. I have only to put a straw-hat on
-the pretty, rough, dark hair, which in sunshine
-gleams with the bronze of chestnut, give her a
-freckle or two on the low, white forehead, color
-her round cheek a little more delicately rose-leaf,
-and there she is—not forgetting to take away the
-wedding-ring!—as she passed me on the Nesshaven
-golf-links that hazy September morning
-eighteen months ago. There is the straight nose,
-the short upper lip, the pure, fresh mouth, the
-plump and rounded chin, and the soft, pink lips
-that part so readily with a smile and show the
-beautiful white teeth, white as the youngest
-hazel-nuts....</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lucy felt my eyes were upon her, and looked
-up at me and smiled, with something of a blush,
-for she blushes very readily. She saw me still
-looking longingly, the invitation in my eyes, and
-after a moment’s hesitation (for, though we have
-been married nearly six months, she still is shy)
-she put down her sewing and came to me at my
-writing-table. She bent over me and put her
-arms round my neck, her warm cheek against
-mine. Her soft lips kissed me; I felt the tender,
-loving palpitation of her bosom as I bent
-my head back. Our sitting-room seemed full of
-silence, happy and melodious silence, while from
-outside in Victoria Street I head the jingle of a
-passing cab....</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p7'>CHAPTER II</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-“THE FRENCH HORN”—MABEL HARKER, MY UNFORTUNATE
-ENGAGEMENT TO HER—MR. CRAGE AND WHARTON
-PARK
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Though</span> the idea to sack Monte Carlo did not
-occur to me till late in the year (in the September
-of which I first met Lucy Thatcher), I must first
-say something of my going down to Nesshaven
-in June, and the events which led to my being in
-a position to undertake an affair of such nerve
-and magnitude.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lucy thought I should take readers straight to
-Monte Carlo, confining myself to that part of the
-work only; but, after talking it over, she agrees
-with me now that the adventure must be led up
-to in the natural way it really was or the public
-won’t believe in it, after all, and I shall have all
-my pains for nothing. So that’s what I shall do,
-in the shortest and best way I can; promising,
-like the esteemed old circus-rider Ducrow, as
-soon as possible to “cut the cackle and come to
-the ’osses.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Well, then, it was towards the middle of June
-when I joined the golf club at Nesshaven, just after
-my militia training month was over. I was
-introduced by Harold Forsyth (one of our Monte
-Carlo band later, and one of the stanchest of
-them), who had the golf fever very badly, and, I
-must say, was beginning to make himself rather
-a bore with it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He and I went down from Liverpool Street
-and stayed at “The French Horn,” the inn kept
-by Mr. Thatcher, Lucy’s father; and after Forsyth
-had introduced me to the club and shown
-me round the links, he went back to his regiment,
-the “Devon Borderers,” then stationed at
-Colchester, very angry and complaining, as soldiers
-mostly are when obliged to do any work.
-I remained behind, not that I had yet seen Lucy,
-but rather to keep out of Mabel Harker’s way—the
-young lady to whom (as Lucy knows) I happened,
-much against my will, to be at that time
-unfortunately engaged to be married.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My first visit to “The French Horn” lasted
-three weeks, during which time I manfully held
-my ground, though heavily bombarded by Mabel’s
-letters, regularly discharged thrice a week from
-her aunt’s house in Clifton Gardens at Folkestone.
-At last, as Mabel came to stay at her sister’s in
-the Regent’s Park (on purpose, I believe), I was
-obliged to go up to town for ten days, and there
-passed a sad time with her at the University
-match, Henley, and the Eton and Harrow; at
-which noted places of amusement and relaxation
-I cannot help thinking I was the most unhappy
-visitor, though, to be sure, I tried hard not to
-show it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But it was dreadful when I got back to my
-rooms in Little St. James’s Street and attempted
-sleep; for I really think that <span class='it'>not</span> being in love
-with the person you have bound yourself to marry
-keeps more men awake <span class='it'>more miserably</span> than
-any of the so-called torments of love, which, with
-scarcely an exception, I have never found otherwise
-than agreeable.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last Mabel went back to Folkestone, and I
-was free to return to “The French Horn,” and I
-never saw her again (thank goodness!) till the
-momentous interview between us in October,
-from which I emerged a free man; she having
-discovered in a boarding-house at Lucerne an
-architect named Byles, whom she’d the sense to
-see was a more determined wooer than I had ever
-been, and likely to make her a far better husband.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The French Horn” is not an old house, having
-been built in about the year 1830, from designs
-made by Mr. Thatcher’s father, who had
-copied it from an inn he had once stayed in in
-Spain. For a country gentleman of old family,
-the father seems to have been a somewhat remarkable
-person. He had, for instance, been an
-intimate friend of the celebrated Lord Byron,
-and was the only man in England (so Mr. Thatcher
-always said) who knew the real story of the
-quarrel between the poet and his wife. Byron
-confided it to him at Pisa as the closest of secrets;
-but, as he had always told it to everybody
-when alive, and his son, my father-in-law, invariably
-did and still does the same, there must be
-a good many people in England by now who know
-all about it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In fact, there was scarcely a golfer or bicyclist
-came to the house but Mr. Thatcher didn’t fix him
-sooner or later in the bar and ask him if he knew
-the real reason why Byron quarrelled with his
-wife and left England. And as it was a hundred
-to one chance that they didn’t, Mr. Thatcher
-always informed them in a loud, husky whisper,
-and shouted after them as they left, “But you
-mustn’t publish it, because it’s a family secret!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And the reason was, according to Mr. Thatcher,
-that Lord Byron had killed a country girl when
-a young man (somebody he’d got into trouble, I
-suppose) and flung her body in the pond at Newstead;
-and that having, in a moment of loving
-expansion, bragged of it to his wife, Lady Byron
-had, very properly, promptly kicked him out of
-the house in Piccadilly; which, also according
-to Mr. Thatcher, was the origin of those touching
-lines:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>“They tell me ’tis decided you depart:</p>
-<p class='line0'>’Tis wise, ’tis well, but not the less a pain,”</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>invariably quoted by him on the departure of a
-guest.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was this same father of Mr. Thatcher’s who
-had parted with Wharton Park, their ancestral
-home. He had been a great gambler in his
-youth, and lost enormous sums at Crockford’s
-and on the turf, so that when he died, in 1850,
-he had nothing to leave his only son, my Lucy’s
-father, but three or four thousand pounds, very
-soon muddled away in unfortunate business
-speculations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last, about twenty years ago, it occurred to
-Mr. Thatcher to come down to Nesshaven and
-take “The French Horn,” close to the Park gates
-of his old home, where, until the golf mania set
-in, beyond gaining a bare livelihood, he did no
-particular good; having to depend on natural-history
-lunatics, who came there in winter and
-prowled the shore with shot-guns after rare birds,
-and, in summer, on families from Colchester—tradespeople
-and bank-clerks and so on—who
-spent their holidays lying about in the warm
-sand among the whins and complaining of the
-food. Betweenwhiles there was scarcely a soul
-about except the coast-guards, who came up to
-fill their whiskey-bottles, and a few bicyclists
-who ate enormous teas and never would pay more
-than ninepence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But when a Colchester builder erected the
-club-house down on the links, Mr. Thatcher’s
-business looked up wonderfully, and he really
-began to make money, and even sometimes to
-turn it away, for the house was small. Harold
-Forsyth discovered it, being quartered so near,
-and it was he who introduced me, for which I
-can never be sufficiently grateful.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was a curious place, as most amateur buildings
-are. Forsyth had not told me anything
-about it, and I was indeed astonished when we
-first drove up; for, with its colored bricks, veranda,
-high-pitched roof, and odd carved wood-work,
-it reminded me somehow of an illustration to
-<span class='it'>Don Quixote</span>, and I quite expected to see a team
-of belled mules and hear the gay castanet click
-of the fandango. Instead of which, out came
-Mr. Thatcher in a dirty old cricket blazer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was towards the middle of June, and the
-sun was just setting at the end of a long, warm
-day. Mr. Thatcher showed us our rooms, and
-then took us into the great hall up-stairs, from
-which a balcony and steps descended into the
-garden. It had a very high-pitched roof, and
-was decorated in the Moorish fashion (rather like
-the old London Crystal Palace; where, by-the-way,
-I have eaten pop-corn many a time as a boy,
-but cannot honestly say I ever enjoyed it), and
-would hold, I dare say, a hundred and fifty people;
-rather senseless, I thought, seeing there
-were only seven or eight bedrooms, but possibly
-useful for bean-feasts or a printer’s wayz-goose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The broad June sun was setting, as I say, and
-streamed right in from the garden, as Forsyth
-and I ate our dinner. The only other guests
-were two brothers named Walton, who spent
-their lives playing golf. They played at Nesshaven
-all day, and wrote accounts of it every
-night, sitting close together, smoking and mumbling
-about the condition of the greens and their
-tee-shots, all of which was solemnly committed
-to paper.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What they would have done with themselves
-twenty years ago I can’t conceive—possibly taken
-to drink. At any rate, now they only live for
-golf, and their thick legs and indifferent play are
-to be seen wherever there’s a links and they can
-get permission to perform.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Thatcher’s wife, a doctor’s daughter, had
-long been dead; but his old mother, of the astonishing
-age of ninety-three, was still alive, and
-lived with him in the inn. At first she had not
-at all liked the idea of settling down almost at
-the gates of Wharton Park, her old home; but
-every year since they came she had expected
-would be her last, and she only lived on on sufferance,
-as it were, in the hope she would soon
-die. Sprier old lady, however, I must say, I never
-saw. She wasn’t in the least deaf, and never
-wore glasses, and she was simply the keenest
-hand at bezique I ever encountered; at which
-entertaining game, by-the-way, if she wasn’t
-watched, she would cheat outrageously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She came of a good old Norfolk family, and
-actually remembered the jubilee of George III.
-in 1810; but when asked for details of that
-touching and patriotic event, all she could say
-was, “Well, I remember the blacksmith’s children
-dressed in white.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Old Mrs. Thatcher and I were great friends,
-and used to potter about the garden together in
-the early mornings. Farther abroad she never
-ventured, except once a year, I believe, when she
-trotted off to the church to visit her husband’s
-grave and see the tablet inside was kept clean.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So June and part of July slipped away, diversified,
-as I have explained, by a visit to London
-and some melancholy pleasures sipped in Mabel
-Harker’s society, from which I returned to
-“The French Horn” in a truly desperate and
-pitiable frame of mind. Indeed, so low and forlorn
-was I at times that Mr. Thatcher, with great
-sympathy, once or twice fetched me out a bottle
-of old port (and not bad tipple, either, for a country
-inn), which we drank together, while he related
-to me at some length the misfortunes of his life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Chief among them was the loss of his ancestral
-home, Wharton Park. The Thatchers
-had lived there since the first of them, a Lord
-Mayor of the time of Henry VIII., had built
-the house in the year 1543—of which original
-structure only the stables, in an extremely
-ramshackle condition, remained. A drunken
-Thatcher with a bedroom candle had burned
-the rest, towards the end of the last century,
-when the present house was built by my father-in-law’s
-grandfather; a bad man, apparently,
-since though he had a wife and children established
-in Portman Square, he kept a mistress in
-one of the wings of Wharton Park, where one
-night she went suddenly raving mad (treading on
-her long boa and believing it a serpent come
-from the lower regions to claim and devour her),
-and filled the air with her screechings till, a year
-later, she died.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Thatcher’s father had mortgaged the place
-heavily to Mr. Crage, an attorney and moneylender
-of Clement’s Inn, and soon after his death,
-in 1850, the mortgage was foreclosed, and Mr.
-Crage took possession and had lived there with
-great disrepute ever since. He was a very vile
-old man, who had killed his wife with ill-treatment
-and turned his daughters out-of-doors; no
-female domestic servant was safe from his dreadful
-advances, and at last he was left with no one
-to serve him but the gardener and his wife, with
-whom, especially when they all got drunk together
-on gin-and-water in the kitchen, he was as often
-as not engaged in hand-to-hand fighting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When I first saw him he was well over eighty,
-and a more abandoned-looking old villain I never
-set eyes on; with a gashed, slobbering mouth, in
-which the yellow teeth stuck up out of the under-jaw
-like an old hound’s; a broken nose, which
-had once been hooked, until displaced by a young
-carpenter in the village, whose sweetheart he had
-been rude to; and the most extraordinary, bushy,
-black eyebrows. His hand shook so he always cut
-himself shaving, and his chin was always dabbled
-with dry blood. In short, a more malignant and
-gaunt personality I never saw, as I first did quite
-close, leaning on a gate and mumbling to himself,
-dressed in a tight body-coat, gaiters, and a
-dull, square, black hat, like a horse-coper’s.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I remember he called out to me over the gate
-in a rasping voice, “Hi, there, you young Cockney!
-what’s the time?” Whereupon I haughtily
-replied it was time he thought of his latter end
-and behaved himself. At which he fell to cursing
-and shaking his stick, and making sham, impotent
-efforts to get over the gate. For they told
-me he was mortally afraid of dying, as all bad
-(and, for the matter of that, many good) men are.
-He knew, of course, Mr. Thatcher was the rightful
-owner of the place, and he would sometimes
-come down to “The French Horn” and jeer him
-about it, offering it for £30,000, which, he dared
-say, Mr. Thatcher had in the house. And more
-than once, curse his senile impudence! Mr.
-Thatcher told me he had offered to marry Lucy!—but
-this is really too horrible a subject to be
-dwelt on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In short, I loathed the old wretch so heartily
-that it was perhaps the happiest moment of my
-life (with the exception of that blessed February
-morning when I stood at the altar of Nesshaven
-church with Lucy and heard her sweet and tremulous
-“I will”) when, after our triumphant return
-from Monte Carlo, Mr. Thatcher and I went
-up to Wharton Park with the £30,000 in notes
-and gold and paid the old ruffian out over the
-coarse kitchen-table, almost the only furniture
-of the grand drawing-room, where there were
-still the old yellow silk hangings—as will all
-come in its place, later on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lucy Thatcher at this time, in June and July,
-was staying with her aunt, Miss Young, her
-mother’s sister, who kept a girls’ school in the
-Ladbroke Grove Road, out at Notting Hill. She
-taught some of the younger children and made
-herself generally useful, taking them out walks
-in Kensington Gardens; for Mr. Thatcher wisely
-thought her too beautiful to be always at “The
-French Horn,” since bicyclists and golfers are
-somewhat apt to be too boldly attentive to the
-lovely faces they meet with on their roundabouts.
-Nor can I altogether blame them. So, as I have
-said, I never saw her till my return in September,
-when her beauty and modesty—which in
-my judgment are synonymous—at once captured
-me, and always will hold me captive till I die.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p17'>CHAPTER III</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-I CONTINUE TO KEEP OUT OF MABEL HARKER’S WAY AND
-GO TO GORING—RETURN TO “THE FRENCH HORN”—WANDERINGS
-WITH LUCY—MR. CRAGE REHEARSES
-HIS OWN FUNERAL
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>As</span> August approached I began to feel apprehensive
-as to the right course to pursue with regard
-to Mabel Harker, my <span class='it'>fiancée</span>. I don’t want
-to say anything unkind about her here in print,
-but, the fact is, the engagement had been an unfortunate
-one from the first. Let me only observe
-that I really honestly think if a man is to
-choose between behaving like a brute (as people
-say you do when you break off an engagement)
-and making himself miserable for life (as I most
-certainly should if I had married Mabel), he had
-much better select the former course. At any
-rate, I know now that if I had had the brutality,
-or the courage, to tell Mabel point-blank at first
-that I was very sorry, but I didn’t care for her
-sufficiently to marry her, I should have spared
-myself a vast deal of annoyance and self-reproach,
-which now I understand to have been
-altogether unnecessary; seeing, I know now very
-well, she didn’t really care for me in the least,
-but simply regarded me as a lay-figure (with
-eight hundred a year) to stand beside her at the
-altar rails and mechanically say “<span class='it'>I will</span>” and “<span class='it'>I
-do</span>” and the rest of it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After her visit to her sister’s in the Regent’s
-Park, in July, she had gone back to Folkestone,
-and I was in some tremor whether she might not
-desire me to spend the holiday months with them
-there; but, most fortunately, Mrs. Harker, her
-aunt, received a very good offer for her house in
-Clifton Gardens, which she determined to take,
-and go abroad to Switzerland, where she and
-Mabel could live in a <span class='it'>pension</span> and save quite
-three-fourths of the home rent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mabel wanted me to join them, but I managed
-to get out of it, and very lucky I did; for it was
-at that very <span class='it'>pension</span> at Lucerne she met Charles
-Byles, the architect, her present husband, and a
-great ass he must have looked with that small
-face of his and huge mustache, and a rope round
-him for going up Pilatus; besides being slightly
-bandy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As for me, I went off down to my sister’s,
-Mrs. Rivers, married to the publisher, who had
-taken a little house on the river at Taplow, where
-I spent the end of August and early part of September
-with great content, more especially in
-the middle of the week, when my precious brother-in-law
-(a dull fellow and a prig) was away doing
-his publishing in town.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I left Taplow the second week in September,
-and something gentle, yet persuasive and strong,
-seeming to call me back to “The French Horn,”
-off I went there; and there, as I have already
-mentioned, I met and fell madly in love with
-Lucy Thatcher at first sight, a passion deepening
-to a tempest before October dawned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, as I am telling the truth in this work,
-and not writing a romance, I have to admit that
-the month I had of Lucy’s dear companionship,
-before I knew I was free, was by no means spent
-idly, and that I made all the running with her
-of which my amorous wits are capable, just as
-though I had been really unappropriated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nor was this altogether wrong, for I felt quite
-sure Providence would stand my good friend,
-as always in such affairs before, and direct Mabel
-Harker’s hopes into another, sounder matrimonial
-channel than mine. Even if Providence
-had not, but had stood aloof and fought shy, I
-should then most certainly have deemed it necessary
-to play the part myself, seeing how deeply
-and truly my heart was now <span class='it'>for the first time</span> engaged.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dear! dear! at what amazing speed that happy
-month flew past; how little there seems I can
-say about it now. Isn’t it strange that Time,
-whom poets prefigure as an ancient person with
-anchylosed joints, further encumbered, notwithstanding
-his great age, with a scythe and an enormous
-hour-glass, is yet on occasion capable of
-showing the panting hurry of a sprinter?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With Lucy I was alone almost all the time,
-for Mr. Thatcher, very properly, wouldn’t allow
-her to help in the bar—a department he gracefully
-presided over himself in his dirty blazer,
-grasping the handle of the beer engine, and sometimes,
-on Saturday nights mostly, slightly shaken
-with a gentlemanly but unmistakable attack of
-hiccoughs. So dear Lucy had nothing much to
-do but go bathing and help her grandmother in
-the garden, gathering the plums and raking
-down the ripening apples. And though there
-were days when, womanlike, she shunned me and
-kept out of my way (so as not to make herself
-too cheap), yet she was very frank and simple
-and trusting in giving me at other times her
-constant companionship; and as on the days
-when she desired to be more alone I always respected
-her wish and kept away (just turning at
-the fourth hole on the links to watch her light,
-firm figure crossing down to her bathing-tent on
-the shore, and waving the putter at her), she was,
-as she has since told me, pleased at my delicacy
-and perception, and showed her pleasure when
-we again met by the extraordinary brightness of
-her eyes and the sweet readiness of her smile.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was harvest-time, and though Mr. Thatcher
-had no acreage of his own, still there was plenty
-of it round him under cultivation, and a fine time
-it was for the Tap, for which there was a separate
-entrance, with a painted hand pointing to it for
-those who couldn’t read. While my sweetheart
-and I strolled about the lanes by day, gathering
-blackberries and plucking at the wisps of corn
-caught by the high hedges and low branches
-from the passing wagons, on warm evenings we
-would sit alone in the garden, listening to the
-hearty rustic revelry of premature harvest-homes
-from the inn, and, when it was very still, hearing
-the faint, mysterious rustle of the waves on the
-long, sandy shore, as though the lulling sea were
-whispering to the land, “Hush! hush! now go to
-sleep like a good child. You’ve had a long day
-and must be tired—<span class='it'>hush!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was at this time, as I very well remember,
-we strolled up late one afternoon to Wharton
-Park, her old ancestral home, and a very curious
-and unedifying sight we witnessed there. We
-went in at the empty lodge gates, and had a look
-in first at the church in the Park grounds, of
-which Mr. Thatcher kept the key in the bar; for
-there was no rectory, and the parson came over
-only on Sundays from Nesshaven for an afternoon
-service—at six in summer and at three in
-winter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The ancient, bird-haunted edifice was pretty
-full of deceased Thatchers—all of them, in fact,
-I believe, lie there, except the Lord Mayor of
-Henry VIII.’s reign, who gets what rest he can
-in a church off Cornhill, and Mr. Thatcher’s
-grandfather, who is buried out at Florence; and
-where there aren’t tablets and tombs of old-time,
-worthy Thatchers, there are kindly memorials to
-their servants, house-keepers, and bailiffs for forty
-years and so on; which when Lucy and I had
-duly and reverently inspected and sighed over,
-we had a peep in at the vestry, where hung the
-parson’s crisp surplice behind a piece of religious
-arras, and a framed and glazed view of Wharton
-in 1750 (the mansion that was burned), with pompous
-gentlemen in three-cornered hats giving
-their hands to ladies in immense hoops up the
-centre path; and a tattered, begrimed notice of
-the reign of Queen Anne, affording the clergy
-instructions for sending parishioners up to St.
-James’s to be touched for the king’s evil.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And when we had mourned over these things,
-and inspected the fragment of the holy-water
-scoop, and the blunt, whitewashed squint, and
-the broken place where once the mass-priests sat,
-and the Wharton pew, with an icy cold stove in it
-and a little frame of dingy red curtain hung
-round on rods and rings, so that the hinds
-shouldn’t see when the quality Thatchers fell
-asleep—not in the Lord!—on drowsy summer
-Sunday afternoons—as, alas! they haven’t had
-the opportunity of doing for many years past
-now; then we went on up to the house, leaving
-the drive, however, and dodging across the fields
-to the <span class='it'>ha-ha</span>, for fear of meeting that old villain
-Crage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We got up through a small spinney to the end
-of the ha-ha that faces the house, and, as we were
-quite close, saw with our own eyes a most strange
-and monstrous sight—a sight so strange that many
-readers would scarcely credit it, had they not
-noticed that truth and not fiction is my object.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hidden in the spinney, we were not more than
-forty yards from the house, which is long and low
-and not particularly beautiful—in fact, decidedly
-Gothic and unsightly. In front of it, lengthways
-and pretty broad, runs a gravel path, and up and
-down that broad gravel path was stamping and
-swearing old Mr. Crage; stamping and swearing
-and shaking his stick at six men (laborers of his,
-Lucy said, and all men she knew) who were actually
-carrying a coffin, a smart, brand-new coffin
-with dandy silver handles, on their shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old wretch was positively rehearsing his
-own funeral! We could very plainly hear him
-cursing the men for walking too fast and jolting
-him, and so on; as though, once the miserable
-old hunks were cold, it mattered how anybody
-carried him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then he made them rest the coffin on one end
-while he showed them himself the pace they
-should travel and the demeanor they ought to exhibit;
-and truly, if it hadn’t been scandalous and
-horrible it would have been ludicrous to see the
-way the blaspheming old scamp trailed the path
-before them, dragging one foot along after another,
-with head and shoulders bent in sham sorrow
-and reverence; trying, in short, to play-act
-the distressed, grief-stricken mourner, touched
-to the quick at his own loss.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When he had finished his parade, he shook his
-stick at the six men, and cursed them, raving
-and foaming, for damned scoundrels and thieves
-and disrespectful ruffians, who would be glad to
-see him dead, and would whistle and dance while
-carrying him off, instead of doing it all in the
-proper depressed manner he had just shown
-them; while the men stood and looked at him
-stupidly and sullenly, and, I’ve no doubt, would
-have liked to jump on him there and then and
-beat him to a pulp, finishing once and for all
-with so dreadful a mockery by making it real.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dear Lucy and I stole away, quite shocked
-and silent. Afterwards she told me old Crage
-had had the coffin a long time, and rehearsed the
-funeral once before; but that lately, having by
-threats of an action screwed twenty pounds out
-of his daughter for money he had lent her (on
-which, by-the-way, Miss Crage had promptly run
-away and got married), he had had the silver
-handles added; and, now that the coffin was, in
-his estimation, quite perfect, had doubtless gone
-through the unholy ceremony again, so that when
-the hour struck there might be no excuse for a
-hitch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So Lucy and I stole away back to “The French
-Horn” in shocked silence. Pleasant and human
-it sounded, when we got on the road again, to
-hear a carter singing as he rattled homeward in
-his empty wagon.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p25'>CHAPTER IV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-I AM FREE OF MABEL HARKER—RETURN TO “THE
-FRENCH HORN”—DISASTROUS INTERFERENCE OF
-HAROLD FORSYTH IN MY AFFAIRS
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>It</span> was the 13th of October, as I very well remember,
-that, shortly after Mabel’s return to
-England from Switzerland, she wrote me an incoherent
-epistle, begging me to come up to town
-and see her at once, for that she was the most
-miserable of girls and had sad news for me,
-signed “your heartbroken Mabel.” I must say
-I was glad to hear it, and greatly looked forward
-to the sad news; since I very well knew it could
-only be that another wooer had stepped up on
-to the Regent’s Park <span class='it'>tapis</span>, and one a good deal
-more determined to win her than I. Directly I
-got there and found the fire wasn’t lit in the
-drawing-room, though it was horribly cold, I
-knew I was right, and the interview was meant
-to be brief and painful.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was the same room, by-the-way (though the
-fire had been lit for us then!) in which I had
-made my unfortunate declaration in the early
-spring, soon after Easter—a declaration precipitated
-by Mabel, who began playing the piano, but
-soon broke down over it and wept, alleging me
-to be the cause of her unhappiness; which, being
-uncommon tender-hearted where the sex are concerned,
-completely bowled me over and drove me
-to propose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When she came in this time, with melancholy
-mouth but unmistakably triumphant eyes, she
-at once told me the sad news; to which I listened
-with as gloomy a face as I could, demanding in
-hoarse tones the name of my successful rival.
-I could scarcely contain my mirth when I heard
-it was Byles, the man she had so often laughed
-at in her letters from Lucerne, as girls not infrequently
-do at the man they are one day destined
-to marry. But I must say I think she
-might at any rate have <span class='it'>offered</span> to send me my
-presents back, for there are many of them (particularly
-a diamond and sapphire ring—cost me
-eighteen pounds) I should have liked to have
-given Lucy. I make no manner of doubt that if
-it had been garnets and carnelian, I should have
-had it back at once in a registered letter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Directly our painful interview was over, I hurried
-back to Nesshaven and “The French Horn,”
-feeling happier than I had done for months past,
-a free man, and my heart beating so rapturously
-I believe an old lady in the carriage with me
-heard it, she looked so frightened at my restlessness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But at “The French Horn” a blow awaited
-me, from which, when I think of it, I yet reel;
-for judge of my stupor when, on my gay return,
-I was met, not by Lucy, towards whom I was so
-impetuously rushing to tell all, but by the whiskified
-thunders of Mr. Thatcher, who took me at
-once into the bar-parlor, and proceeded there and
-then to claw me about the ears with the angry
-rhetoric of a theatrically outraged heavy father.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of course he was quite right; but then I was
-myself <span class='it'>now</span> quite right, too; and when he talked
-in real Adelphi fashion about stealing affections
-and repaying him in this way, I was—thank
-Heaven!—in a position to be angry too, and give
-him as good as he gave me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So I let him fume on till he ran himself down,
-when I temperately explained what my position
-really was, and how I was altogether free; and
-how, above all, that if Lucy cared for me, as I
-very well knew she did, I was going to marry her
-at once, and (if not precisely in the immediate
-neighborhood of “The French Horn”) settle
-down and live happily ever after.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whereupon Mr. Thatcher’s easily corrugated
-brow began as easily to clear, and he steadied himself
-and seized and shook me by the wrong hand.
-So we sat down and had a cigar and a split whiskey-and-soda,
-and he was good enough to say he
-had known all along (from the way I had always
-paid my bill, I suppose) that he could trust me
-implicitly, and all would come right in the end.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But in the meantime he had shipped off dear
-Lucy to her aunt’s school in the Ladbroke Grove
-Road, where she had gone back—very tearfully,
-poor child, at the news of my supposed treachery—to
-her altogether uncongenial employment
-with the younger children.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By judicious pumping I discovered it was
-Harold Forsyth who had blown upon me and
-“queered my pitch,” as showmen say, having
-come over from Colchester to play golf, and been
-seized upon by the watchful Thatcher, who of
-course had noticed my unremitting attentions to
-his daughter. Upon which Harold, either because
-he fancied it his duty (old friends are often
-very inconsiderate) or from sheer stupidity, had
-let slip the disastrous news of my engagement
-to another lady; though, as a matter of fact, at
-the very moment of their conversation it was off
-and I was free.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Old Mrs. Thatcher took the situation in at a
-glance, and, either from a natural desire to see
-her granddaughter properly settled or from pure
-friendship for me, who had always been attentive
-to her, and once took a bee out of her hair (that
-animal being almost the only living thing she
-really feared), immediately suggested I should go
-off at once to the Ladbroke Grove Road, provided
-with a letter to the aunt from Mr. Thatcher,
-in which everything was explained, and I was
-given authority to interview and settle matters
-with my dear sweetheart. So, next morning early,
-off I drove to Nesshaven Station in the milk
-cart, gay as a lark—that chorister of the poor
-and the cheerful well-to-do—and by twelve
-o’clock was rattling in a cab down the Ladbroke
-Grove Road.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p29'>CHAPTER V</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-ANGLESEY LODGE—MY INTERVIEW WITH LUCY IN KENSINGTON
-GARDENS—NOT SO SATISFACTORY AS I COULD
-DESIRE
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>There</span> was a piano-organ playing in front of
-Anglesey Lodge as I drove up; it was playing
-the old “Les Roses” waltz, and quite dramatic
-and affecting the music sounded as I impatiently
-waited in the drawing-room, hung with Doré’s
-works to impress parents, and with a model of
-the Taj under glass, done in soapstone, and sent
-by some girl-pupil, I imagine, who had married
-and gone out to India.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The aunt soon joined me, smiling, with Mr.
-Thatcher’s open letter in her hand, and a very
-handsome woman she must have been—indeed,
-still was—with traces, on a florid scale, of Lucy’s
-simple and yet delicate beauty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was so friendly, and made herself so fascinating,
-it was fully half an hour before I could
-get away. She told me Lucy was out with some
-of the pupils, and that, if I went to Kensington
-Gardens and walked down the Broad Walk, I
-should be sure to see them. Further, if we
-made it up (as we surely should, she graciously
-added), she begged me to come back to lunch
-at half-past one; though she must ask me not
-to walk home with the young ladies through
-the streets for fear of adverse neighborly comments,
-and upsetting them for the afternoon
-studies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was soon at the entrance to the gardens in
-the Bayswater Road, where the keeper’s lodge is,
-with its glass bottles of sweets and half-penny
-rock-buns; and, true enough, there was dear
-Lucy, sitting on one of the seats facing the
-walk, reading to one of the little girls, while the
-other bigger ones, perhaps half a dozen of them,
-were playing rounders in French, among the trees
-and the dead leaves.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Combien de rounders avez-vous?</span>” cried one
-of them as I came up; and “<span class='it'>Courrez, Maud,
-courrez!</span>” cried another, clapping her hands,
-as the tennis-ball in its torn cover whizzed
-close by me, whacked by a young person with
-a racquet, who was soon off on her round
-in a short frock but with uncommonly long
-legs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I came quite close behind Lucy, taking care
-not to make the leaves rustle. She was reading
-Bonnechose’s <span class='it'>History of France</span> aloud, something
-about the wars of the Fronde and Cardinal
-Richelieu.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘<span class='it'>The conduct of the cardinal at this juncture</span>—’ ”
-she was saying with great seriousness,
-when the little girl beside her, who naturally
-wasn’t attending, looked up and saw me. I gave
-her a friendly smile, and after that moment’s
-careful scrutiny which females of all ages indulge
-in, she smiled back. The next moment Lucy
-looked at her and then round up at me, giving a
-soft, frightened “Hah!” and then going as white
-as a sheet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Really, it is quite impossible to say at what
-age a comprehension of love, its torments and
-its joys, arises in the fresh girlish breast. The
-pretty creature seated at Lucy’s side couldn’t
-have been more than eleven, but she saw at once
-I loved her teacher and desired to be alone with
-her; so she immediately rose, staid and composed
-as a woman, shook her long hair, and, with
-complete unconsciousness, strolled off and joined
-the other older girls; while they, not to be behindhand
-in delicacy, soon stopped their somewhat
-noisy game, and, forming a sympathetic
-group at some little distance under an elm, stood
-there talking in whispers with their backs to us;
-pretending to be immensely interested and absorbed
-in the ’buses rumbling down the Bayswater
-Road.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But for her little frightened cry, Lucy received
-me in silence, and didn’t even give me
-her hand. She sat there on the seat—cut and
-scarred with other, happier lovers’ records—with
-her head slightly turned away from me; perfectly
-composed, apparently, after the first shock and
-natural agitation of seeing me again so suddenly
-were over.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I asked her how she was and how long she
-had been in town; she said she was quite well,
-and had been there since the day before yesterday.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then she said, calmly, “Can you tell me
-the time, please?” and on my replying it was
-a quarter to one, murmured she must be going
-home to dinner, and made as if she would
-rise.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I stopped her with, “Please, Lucy, let me speak
-to you first.” So she remained perfectly still,
-though with her pretty head still turned away
-from me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Eloquent, or, at all events, talkative, as I generally
-am with the sex, I admit I couldn’t for
-the life of me tell how to begin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last I said I was afraid she must think
-badly of me, and then waited of course for her
-contradiction; but as it never came, and she
-never made a sign, I went on to say I shouldn’t
-dare approach her were it not I was a free man;
-that my affair with—with the other lady was
-finally at an end, and so I came to her first and
-at once with my whole heart. As I spoke, I
-watched her closely, if only in the hope I might
-detect some slight twitching of her small ungloved
-hands, or some involuntary twittering of
-her eyes or lips, when I told her I was free; but
-she sat so like an antique, or, for the matter of
-that, a modern statue, I began to grow frightened,
-since I know very well how implacable even
-the tenderest of women can sometimes be when
-it suits them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, Lucy dear!” I stammered, “d-don’t be
-hard on me. I loved you the moment I saw you.
-I never really loved the other one. Since the
-day I first set eyes on you, I have never given
-any other woman a serious thought. You can’t
-be so unkind as to break my life in pieces, merely
-because I’ve been careless, merely because I
-spoke to you before I was quite sure I was free?
-Why, I was free of her directly I saw you, and if
-she hadn’t released me of her own accord, as she
-has done—Oh, Lucy! don’t leave me in this
-dreadful suspense! Do, my dear girl, say something
-kind to me, for mercy’s sake!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t feel kindly towards you, Mr. Blacker,”
-Lucy answered, cold and stern, “and I can’t pretend.
-I know quite well what’s happened. You
-thought I was only an innkeeper’s daughter—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, Lucy!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And that so long as you were staying there
-you might as well amuse yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Love is no amusement, Lucy—it’s a most
-fearful trial.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But did you ever, when you were daring to
-make love to me,” she said, suddenly turning on
-me with amazing fierceness, “even cease writing
-love letters to her? Tell me that, Mr. Vincent
-Blacker!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I groaned; for the truth is I had written more
-warmly to Mabel Harker all that delightful month
-at “The French Horn” than usual; from the
-simple fact that, myself feeling happier, I naturally
-wished Mabel to share, in a sense, in my
-joy. So what could I do but groan?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If we hadn’t found out quite by accident you
-were engaged,” Lucy went on, “should we have
-ever found it out from you? Were you making
-any effort of any sort to free yourself? You
-were acting an untruth to me all that time. How
-can I tell you are not acting an untruth to me
-now?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wasn’t in the least acting an untruth when
-I said I loved you. How can you say such a
-thing, Lucy dear?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You mustn’t call me by my Christian name,”
-she answered, pale, and setting her lips tight;
-and then she was silent again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You are very hard on me,” I cried, after a
-pause, “and I hope you will never live to regret
-it. What could a man do differently, situate so
-unfortunately as I was?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You should have been perfectly honest and
-frank. At least, you should have made sure you
-were off with the old love before you tried to be
-on with the new.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But you talk as if these things always lay
-within our power! I didn’t purposely fall in
-love with you—I simply couldn’t help myself!
-And into the other affair I had been more or less
-entrapped.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” she replied, with some scorn, “and
-three months hence you will be saying exactly
-the same thing to the next girl.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shall never speak to any one again,” I answered,
-solemnly and truly, “as I am speaking
-now to you. You can believe me or not, as you
-please, but I can never think of any one as I
-think of you, and I never have. If you will only
-think of me kindly, and try to make excuses for
-me; if you will only consult your own heart a
-little—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I mustn’t allow myself to be turned round
-by a few soft speeches,” said Lucy, looking almost
-frightened and rising before I could prevent
-her. “You have hurt me very much, and
-I don’t know that my feelings will ever alter, or
-that I should allow them to.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But you will let me see you again?” I humbly
-entreated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know. Certainly not for some little
-time.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I may write to you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, certainly not!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This is all very poor comfort, Lucy,” I
-groaned, “after the journey I have taken on
-purpose to see you and make it all right.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What other comfort do you deserve, Mr.
-Blacker?” she asked me, haughtily, and immediately
-moved away from the seat towards her
-young ladies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I will come down at Christmas, if I may,” I
-said, tenderly and humbly; but she never replied,
-and the next moment was marshalling the girls
-for walking home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They walked to the gate in the Bayswater
-Road in a group, and formed up two and two as
-they got outside.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lucy never turned her head once, but nearly
-every young lady treated herself to a look behind;
-when they might have seen me plunged down in
-melancholy on the seat, digging a morose pattern
-into the Broad Walk with the point of my
-stick.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I drawled back unhappily across the Gardens
-and down the empty Row to Hyde Park Corner,
-along Piccadilly, and to the club.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Christmas! and this was only October!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sympathetic readers (and I desire no others)
-can have no conception what I suffered during
-the next few days.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p37'>CHAPTER VI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-EARLY DIFFICULTIES—I FAIL TO PERSUADE THE HONORABLE
-EDGAR FANSHAWE, THE REVEREND PERCY BLYTH,
-AND MR. PARKER WHITE, M. P., TO JOIN OUR MONTE
-CARLO PARTY
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Lucy</span> declares I have written enough about her,
-and now had better get on to the Monte Carlo
-part—who went with me, and why they went,
-and so on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I dare say she’s right; for though we neither
-of us know anything whatever about writing, she
-says she represents the average reader, and, having
-been told (as well as I could do it) something
-about “The French Horn” and my love-affair
-there, is, as an average reader, growing anxious
-to learn how I got the party together for so apparently
-hazardous, not to say hopeless, an enterprise.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I must just mention, however, that, after my
-sad interview with her in Kensington Gardens, I
-at once wrote to Mr. Thatcher and told him exactly
-what had occurred, informing him of my
-intention to come down at Christmas and try
-and settle matters with his daughter. At the
-same time I begged him to send me up the
-clothes and portmanteaus I had left behind me
-at “The French Horn.” They arrived, accompanied
-by a scrawl from Mr. Thatcher, urging me
-to be a man and bear up and all would come right,
-and enclosing a rather larger bill than I fancied
-I owed, but which I thought it politic to pay
-without protest of any kind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Even the old lady, his mother, sent me a line,
-in a very upright fist, kindly informing me
-“brighter days were in store.” A simple prophecy,
-that long has ceased to interest me; since I have
-invariably had it from the innumerable fortunetellers,
-by cards and tea-leaves and the crystal,
-whom for years past I have rather foolishly been
-in the habit of consulting, but never derived any
-real benefit from.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As for my great idea to sack Monte Carlo, it
-came to me one morning (quite unexpectedly, as
-I have said) when I was lying in bed, trying to
-summon up resolution to rise for another dull
-and irksome day. It was still a long time off
-Christmas, and life was lying on me with extreme
-heaviness; for, as I think I have explained, I am
-in the militia, and when once my month’s training
-is over have nothing to do with myself except
-live on my eight hundred a year and amuse
-myself as best I can; and my idleness was rendered
-further indigestible at this period by the
-unhappy state of my relations with dear Lucy,
-whom I could neither see nor write to.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the idea that I should get a small, resolute
-party together, and raid the tables at Monte
-Carlo, brought a new interest into my life; and
-after making a few quiet and judicious inquiries
-(for I had never been there), I determined to set
-about the affair in earnest and see if I could get
-any one to join me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My first efforts in that direction, as is generally
-the case with anything new and startling,
-were not at all successful; but the more opposition
-and ridicule I met with, the more obstinate
-and determined I became. As for the morality
-of the affair, that, as I have said, has never
-troubled me from first to last. Does any one
-think of calling the police immoral when they
-go and raid a silver gambling-hell in Soho? For
-the life of me I have never been able to see the
-difference between us, except that <span class='it'>in our case</span>
-there was needed a greater nerve and address.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now my sister, Mrs. Rivers, the wife of the
-publisher, lives in Medworth Square, S. W., and,
-on considering her intimates, I made up my mind
-to approach the Honorable Edgar Fanshawe first.
-He has a brother in the Foreign Office, and relations
-scattered about everywhere in government
-employ, so I decided he would be a good man to
-have with us in case the affair proved a <span class='it'>fiasco</span>
-and we all got into trouble, a chance that naturally
-had to be provided for.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Fanshawe, I should explain, was at one time
-in the Guards, but now writes the most dreadfully
-dull historical novels, which my brother-in-law
-publishes, and no one that I have ever met
-reads. Every autumn, sure as fate, among the
-firm’s list of new books you see announced,
-<span class='it'>Something or Other, a Tale of the Young Pretender</span>;
-or, <span class='it'>Something or Other Else, an Episode of
-the Reign of Terror</span>; with quotations from the
-<span class='it'>Scots Herald</span>, “this enthralling story”; or, from
-the <span class='it'>Dissenters’ Times</span>, “no more powerful and
-picturesque romance has at present issued,” etc.
-Or <span class='it'>The Leeds Commercial Gazette</span> would declare
-it “the best historical novel since Scott,” which
-I seem to have heard before of many other dull
-works.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Fanshawe is a purring, mild, genteel, rather
-elderly person, who listens to everything you are
-good enough to say most attentively and politely,
-with his head on one side, and never will be
-parted from his opera-hat. When I attacked
-him one night after dinner in Medworth Square
-he was in his usual autumnal condition of beatitude
-at the excellence of the reviews of his
-latest historical composition (which, as usual,
-scarcely sold), and beamed on me with delighted
-condescension, stuffing quantities of raisins.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What shall you be doing in January?” I
-cautiously began. “Would you be free for a little
-run over to Monte Carlo?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Unfortunately, the Honorable Edgar is the sort
-of person who, half an hour after dinner, will
-undertake to do anything with anybody, and then
-write and get out of it immediately after breakfast
-next morning, when he’s cold; so I quite
-expected the reply that Monte Carlo in January
-would suit him exactly, and what hotel did I
-propose to stay at?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now I’ve an idea,” I went on, drawing a little
-closer. “You’ve been to Monte Carlo, of
-course, and know what a quantity of money
-there is in the place.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Some of it mine,” smiled Fanshawe. “I
-beg your pardon for interrupting you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” I said, “how would you like to join
-a little party of us for the purpose of getting it
-back?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A syndicate to work a system?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nothing so unprofitable.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know of any other way.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My idea,” I went on, sinking my voice, “is
-shortly this: that half a dozen of us should join
-and take a yacht—a fast steam-yacht—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Rather an expensive way of doing it, isn’t
-it?” objected Fanshawe, in alarm. He doesn’t
-mind what he pays to have his books published,
-but is otherwise mean.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not when you consider the magnitude of the
-stakes.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, the most you can win, even if you break
-the bank, is only a hundred thousand francs!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But consider the number of the tables, to
-say nothing of the reserve in the vaults, and the
-money lying about already staked!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old boy looked puzzled, but nodded his
-head politely all the same. “That’s true,” he
-said, vaguely.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The place is not in any sense guarded, as no
-doubt you remember.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, I don’t know that I ever saw a soldier
-about, except one or two, very bored, on sentry
-go, up at Monaco. But what has that to do with
-it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, half a dozen resolute men with revolvers
-could clear the whole place out in five minutes,”
-I murmured, seductively. “The steam-yacht
-lies in the harbor, we collect the money, or
-as much of it as half a dozen of us can carry
-away, and, once on board the lugger—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Fanshawe pushed his chair back and stared at
-me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“—We go full-steam ahead to one of the Greek
-islands, divide the swag, scuttle the steamer,
-make our way to the Piræus, inspect the Acropolis,
-and come home, <span class='it'>viâ</span> Corfu, as Cook’s tourists.
-Or go to the Holy Land, eh, by way of
-completely averting suspicion?” And I winked
-and nudged him, nearly falling over in my effort
-to get at his frail old ribs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My dear friend!” gasped the startled Fanshawe;
-“why propose such an elaborate pleasantry?
-It’s like school-boy’s talk in a dormitory.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I never felt further from my school-days in
-my life,” I answered with determination. “The
-affair is perfectly easy—easier than you think.
-All it wants is a little resolution, and the money’s
-ours.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But it’s simple robbery.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, don’t imagine,” I at once replied, “I
-propose anything so coarse as burglary and the
-melting-pot. No; I say to myself, here is the
-most iniquitous establishment in Europe, simply
-reeking with gold, of which an enormous surplus
-remains at the end of the year to be divided,
-principally among Semitic Parisians, who lavish
-it on their miserable pleasures. Here, on the
-other hand, are numerous deserving establishments
-in London—hospitals and so on—with
-boards out, closing their wards and imploring
-subscriptions. The flow of gold has evidently
-got into the wrong channels, as it always will if
-not sharply looked after. Be ours the glorious
-enterprise to divert it anew—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My good friend,” interrupted Fanshawe, “if
-I thought you serious—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Never was more serious in my life!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But, gracious me, suppose you’re all caught?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, there is a prison up at Monaco, I believe,”
-I answered, lightly; “but they tell me
-prisoners come and go just as they please. That
-doesn’t in the least alarm me. Besides, Europe
-would be on our side—at all events, the respectable
-portion of it—and would hail our <span class='it'>coup</span> with
-rapture, even if it ended in failure. And with
-your brother in the Foreign Office, they’d soon
-have you back. Now what do you say? Will
-you make one?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My dear Blacker, you really must be crazy!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“At a given signal, when the rooms are fullest,
-some of us—two would be enough—drive the
-gamblers into a corner and make them hold
-up their hands. The others loot the tables
-and the vaults. Then we turn out the electric
-light—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Any more wine, Fanshawe?” called out my
-brother-in-law.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Fanshawe rose, and I saw at once by the limp
-way he pulled his waistcoat down he was no good.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” I said, as I followed him into the
-drawing-room, “if you won’t join us, you must
-give me your word not to breathe a syllable of
-what we are going to do. It’s an immense idea,
-and I don’t want any one to get hold of it first,
-and find the place gutted by some one else before
-we can get a look in.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Fanshawe’s only reply was that if I got into
-trouble he would thank me not to apply to him
-to bail me out; so we mutually promised.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I don’t know that, on the whole, I very much
-regretted him; he is, after all, a very muddle-headed,
-nervous old creature; but my hopes
-were for a time a good deal dashed by the refusal
-of the Reverend Percy Blyth to join us (much as
-he approved of the scheme), though I did my best
-to tempt him with the offer of new stops for his
-organ out of the boodle. He is the clergyman
-of St. Blaise’s, Medworth Square, and intimate
-with all the theatrical set, for whom he holds
-services at all sorts of odd hours; the natural
-result of which is he is on the free list of nearly
-every theatre, and has given me many a
-box.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now every school-boy knows how priceless the
-presence of a parson is to all human undertakings—on
-a race-course, for instance, for thimble-rigging,
-the three-card trick, and other devices.
-They call him the <span class='it'>bonnet</span>, and if you have any
-trifling dispute about there being no pea, or the
-corner of the card being turned down, you are
-likely to be very much astonished to find the
-clergyman (who, of course, is only a cove dressed
-up) take the proprietor’s part and, at a pinch,
-offer to fight you, or any other dissatisfied bystander.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So I naturally thought it would be a good
-thing for us if we had a real parson in the party,
-if only as a most superior <span class='it'>bonnet</span>, to avert suspicion;
-though, if I had only thought a little, I
-might have known the idea wouldn’t work, since
-Blyth couldn’t very well have gone into the Casino
-rooms in parson’s rig, and I didn’t really want
-him for anything else.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was only one other of my sister’s friends
-I approached on the subject before I had recourse
-to my own—Parker White, a bouncing sort of
-young man who had just got into the House of
-Commons, and who, I thought, might possibly
-be useful. But, as I cautiously felt my way with
-him, he looked so frightened, and talked such
-balderdash about his position and filibustering
-and European complications (complications with
-Monaco, if you please, with an army of seventy
-men!) that I pretended it was all a joke and
-turned the conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To tell the truth, I was not much disappointed
-in Parker White, since I know very well how
-most of those younger men in the House are all
-gas and no performance; but, all the same, he
-was pretty cunning; for, to put it vulgarly, he
-lay low and waited, and when talk began to get
-about of what we had done, and the Casino Company’s
-shares fell immediately in consequence of
-our success, he bought them up like ripe cherries;
-and then, when it was all contradicted by a subsidized
-press (which made me wild and drove me
-to writing this work in self-defence), and the
-shares jumped up again, he promptly sold and
-made a good thing out of it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But he has never had the grace to thank me
-for putting the opportunity in his way; which
-is so like those men in the House who speculate
-on their information on the sly and then blush
-to find it fame.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p47'>CHAPTER VII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-I INTERVIEW MR. BRENTIN—HIS SYMPATHY AND INTEREST—SIR
-ANTHONY HIPKINS AND THE YACHT <span class='it'>AMARANTH</span>—WE
-DETERMINE TO LOOK OVER IT
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>I soon</span> began to see that, out of so conventional
-an atmosphere as Medworth Square, I was not
-likely to gather any great profit to my scheme;
-that, if my idea were ever to bear fruit, I must
-set to work among my own particular friends in
-my own way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On thinking them over, I determined to approach
-Mr. Julius C. Brentin first, an American
-gentleman whom I knew to be above prejudice,
-and to whom I could talk with perfect freedom
-and security.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He is a man of about fifty-five, a Californian,
-of medium height (which, like many Americans,
-he always pronounces <span class='it'>heighth</span>), with black hair,
-black eyebrows, and a small black mustache. He
-carries cigars loose in every pocket, and he will
-drink whiskey with you with great good-humor
-till the subject of the immortality of the soul
-crops up, when he suddenly becomes angry, suspicious,
-and, finally, totally silent. And that
-subject he always introduces himself, though for
-what reason I never can conceive, unless it be to
-quarrel and part. I had met him in the street a
-day or two before, when he told me he had recently
-married a New York young lady and was
-staying at the “Victoria”; he begged me to come
-and call, and on going there I found him chewing
-a green cigar in the smoking-room, his hat
-on the bridge of his pugnacious nose, and a glass
-of Bourbon whiskey beside him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He reached me out a hand from the depths of
-his breeches pocket, as though he had just found
-it there and desired to make me a present of it,
-and pulled me down by his side. Then he gave
-me a long, black cigar out of his waistcoat pocket,
-worked his own round to the farther corner of
-his mouth, while with a solemn gesture he pointed
-to his trousers, carefully turned up over small
-patent-leather boots.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mr. Blacker,” he said, “observe my pants.
-I am endeavoring to please Mrs. Brentin; I am
-striving to be English. You English invariably
-turn up the bottom of your pants; it is economical
-and it is fashionable, don’t yer know.” And
-Mr. Brentin winked at me a glittering, beady
-black eye.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I hoped Mrs. Brentin was quite well, and he
-replied:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mrs. Brentin has gone way off to Holborn,
-sir; she has organized an expedition with Mrs.
-William Chivers, ay socially prominent Philadelphian,
-in search of the scene of the labors of
-your Mrs. Gamp. From there she goes to the
-Marshalsea, to discover traces of Little Dorrit.
-She knows your Charles Dickens by heart, sir,
-and she follows him ayround. This is her first
-visit to the old country, and I humor her tastes,
-which are literary and high-toned, by staying at
-home and practising the English accent. I have
-studied the English accent theoretically, and I
-trace it to the predominance among your people
-of the waist muscles. We as a nation are deficient
-in waist muscles. So I stay at home and
-exercise them in the refined society of any stranger
-who can be indooced to talk with me. It is
-a labor of some difficulty, Mr. Blacker, which is
-gradually driving me to drink; for the strangers
-in this hotel are shy, and apt to regard me in the
-unflattering light of ay bunco-steerer.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Brentin sighed, drank, and worked his jaw
-and cigar with the solemnity of a cow masticating.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“At other times, sir,” he drawled, “I stroll a
-block or two, way down the Strand. I compose
-my features and endeavor to assoom the vacant
-expression of ay hayseed or countryman. I have
-long desired to be approached by one of your
-confidence-trick desperadoes, but my success so
-far has been mighty small. They keep away from
-me, sir, as though I had the <span class='it'>grippe</span>. I apprehend,
-Mr. Blacker, that in my well-meant efforts
-to look imbecyle, I only look cunning. If they
-would only try me with the green-goods swindle,
-I should feel my time was not being altogether
-misspent. It is plaguy disheartening, and I might
-as well be back in Noo York for all the splurge
-I am making over here. And how have you
-been putting in your time, sir, since last year,
-when we went down to the Durby—I should say,
-the Darby—together?” he asked, turning his
-head my way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On any other day, I have no doubt, I should
-have given Mr. Brentin a spirited and somewhat
-lengthy sketch of my doings during the last year
-and a half; but my recent failures in Medworth
-Square had taught me the value of time, and I
-plunged at once into the real object of my visit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Directly, in rapid, clear-cut outline, I began
-to make my scheme clear, Mr. Brentin turned
-and looked at me; from the rigid lines of my
-speaking countenance he saw at once I was in
-earnest, and transferred his gaze to his pants and
-boots. Once only he gave me another rapid
-look, an ocular upper-cut, apparently to satisfy
-himself of my sincerity, when my mask spoke
-so strongly of enthusiasm and determination I
-felt I had completely reassured him, and was, in
-fact, gradually overhauling his will. As I went
-on, he began to breathe gustily through his nose
-and give a series of small kicks with his varnished
-toe, indications of growing ardor for the enterprise
-and a desire to immediately set about it
-that simply enchanted me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When I descended to details, it was my turn
-to watch him. The cigar he was chewing was a
-complete indicator of his frame of mind. As I
-spoke of half a dozen resolute men with revolvers,
-it rose to the horizontal; when I mentioned the
-steam-yacht and a bolt for the harbor, it drooped
-like a trailed stick; while, as I sketched our rapid
-flight to the Greek Archipelago and division of
-the spoil, it stuck up like a peacock’s tail, a true
-standard of revolt against the narrowness and
-timidity of our modern life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The American mind works so quickly I was
-not at all surprised when Mr. Brentin suddenly
-sat up, took the cigar out of his mouth, and hurled
-it to the other end of the smoking-room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bravo! for I knew it signified away with prejudice,
-away with conventionality, away, above
-all, with fear! It was a silent, triumphant “<span class='it'>Jacta
-est alea, Rubicon transibimus!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then he turned to me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mr. Blacker,” he excitedly whispered, “by
-the particular disposition of Providence there is
-a party now lying up-stairs, ay titled gentleman
-with an enlarged liver, the fruit of some years
-spent in your colonial service, who owns and desires
-to part with one, at all events, of the instruments
-of this enterprise of ours.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The yacht?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The steam-yacht, sir. It is called the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>,
-and lies at this moment at Ryde.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What is the owner’s name?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He was good enough to introdooce himself
-to me one afternoon last week in the parlor as
-Sir Anthony Hipkins.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hipkins? That doesn’t sound right.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sir,” replied Mr. Brentin, “I know very little
-of your titled aristocracy, but I admit it did
-not sound right to me. However, I talked it
-over with my friend, the clerk in the bureau, and
-he assured me that Hipkins is his real name;
-that he has been for some years judge on the
-Gold Coast, and, by the personal favor of your
-Queen Victoria, has been lately elevated to the
-dignity of knighthood, as some compensation for
-his complaint caught in the service. He had
-the next room to us, but the midnight groaning-act
-in which he occasionally indulged was too
-much for Mrs. Brentin, and we were forced to
-shift.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Has he spoken to you about his yacht?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He introdooced himself right here in the
-parlor, and offered it me for three thousand
-pounds.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What did you say?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I presented him to Mrs. Brentin right away,
-as I invariably do when I want an inconvenient
-request refused. She explained that ay steam-yacht
-was very little use to her in the journeys
-she is at present taking about this city in search
-of the localities of Charles Dickens. Whereupon
-Judge Hipkins, who impressed me as being
-brainy, immediately replied, ‘What about Yarmouth
-and little Em’ly’ ”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What did Mrs. Brentin say to that?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, sir, Mrs. Brentin thought three thousand
-pounds too much to pay for the privilege of
-approaching Yarmouth by sea; more especially
-as she is a bad sailor, and commences to be sick
-at her stomach before leaving the kay-side. Now,
-however, Mr. Blacker,” he said, rising, “we will,
-if you please, go and find Sir Anthony Hipkins,
-and we will buy his steam-yacht.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The rapidity of the American mind somewhat
-alarmed me; still, I felt there was nothing for it
-but to follow Mr. Brentin. He went straight to
-the bureau, and, on inquiring for Sir Anthony,
-learned he was up-stairs ill in bed, and that his
-wife was with him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we went up in the lift, Mr. Brentin winked
-at me. “It is in our favor, sir, that the judge
-is sick; we will be sympathetic, but we will
-not offer more than two thousand five hundred
-pounds.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We found No. 246, and Mr. Brentin knocked.
-A deep groaning voice called to us to come in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The judge must be real bad if he has sent
-for his wife,” observed Mr. Brentin. “On reflection,
-we will try him with two thousand. Come
-right alawng in, sir, and I will present you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I followed him into the bedroom, and there we
-found Sir Anthony lying, propped up in bed.
-He was a long, gaunt man, with a grizzling
-beard, a hook-nose, like a tulwar, and a quantity
-of rough, brown hair turning gray. By his side
-was sitting a small, dry, prim old lady, reading
-from a book, with gold pince-nez, and notwithstanding
-our entrance she went steadily on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Stop that now, Nanny,” Sir Anthony called,
-fretfully, stretching his hand out of the bed over
-the page, “and let us hear what these men want.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sir Anthony and Lady Hipkins,” said Mr.
-Brentin, politely, with a bow to each, his hat in
-his hand, “permit me to present to you my
-young friend, Mr. Vincent Blacker. He is in
-want of a yacht, and though he has his eye on
-several, would be glad to learn particulars of
-yours before concluding.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sir Anthony rolled his bony head on the pillow
-and groaned. Directly he withdrew his hand
-from the page the dry old lady went on with her
-reading in a curious, dull, flat voice. Mr.
-Brentin came to the foot of the bed, and, leaning
-his arms on the brass rail, surveyed him sympathetically.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are you too sick, judge,” he asked, “to discuss
-business matters with us?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>And in the eleventh year of Joram, the son of
-Ahab</span>—” droned her ladyship.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Go away, Nanny,” shouted Sir Anthony,
-pointing to the opposite door; “go into the next
-room, or go out and take a walk.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Brentin opened the door, and, after putting
-the Bible on the bed under Sir Anthony’s
-big nose, Lady Hipkins left the room quietly, as
-she was directed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re Mr. Brentin, ain’t you?” asked the
-judge. “Beg your pardon for not recognizing
-you. What did you say your friend’s name was?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Brentin explained that I was Mr. Vincent
-Blacker, a gentleman of position and the highest
-integrity, an officer in Queen Victoria’s militia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, ah!” said the judge, sitting up in bed
-and scratching his legs ruefully. “And he wants
-to buy a yacht?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He has almost concluded for the purchase of
-one,” Mr. Brentin replied, “but I have suggested
-he should wait—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The judge began most unexpectedly to laugh,
-bending his head between his knees and stifling
-his merriment with the counterpane.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The judge is better,” observed Mr. Brentin,
-with a wave of his hand. “The presence of
-gentlemen who sympathize with his complaint,
-and the likelihood of completing—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s too damn ridiculous,” laughed the judge,
-“to be caught shamming Abraham like this, by
-George! Serves me right. You see, Mr. Blacker,
-after three years of the Gold Coast I was naturally
-anxious to see whether London had greatly altered
-in my absence, and, consequently, neglected
-to go and reside at Norwood with her ladyship.
-Whereupon her ladyship wrote, demanding the
-reason of my lengthy stay in the metropolis.
-What was I to do but say I was too ill to move,
-but that the minute I was well enough—” Sir
-Anthony went off laughing again, and I laughed
-too.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But that midnight groaning-act of yours,
-judge,” asked the shocked Brentin, “which so
-much disturbed and alarmed Mrs. Brentin and
-myself?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, that was genuine enough,” chuckled Sir
-Anthony; “but it was more the thought of having
-to go to Norwood and attend the concerts at
-the Crystal Palace than any actual physical pain.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Brentin’s visage clouded over, and he
-grew sombre and grave. With true American
-chivalry, he could not bear the idea of any one
-imposing on a woman, especially an old and plain
-one.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“However,” said the judge, “I’m rightly punished
-by her ladyship’s descending on me and
-forcing me to go to bed—not to mention the
-Book of Kings, and all my smoke cut off.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This will be ay lesson to you, judge, I trust,”
-observed Mr. Brentin, sternly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“First and second lesson, by George! And
-now let’s talk about the yacht. Your friend
-wants to buy a yacht?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I must say I was a good deal alarmed at Brentin’s
-coolness and precipitancy in so readily bringing
-me forward as purchaser of the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>,
-and, as I listened to their conversation, quite
-made up my mind not to bind myself irrevocably
-to anything. Three, or even two, thousand
-pounds! My idea was doubtless a remarkable
-one, but I had no notion of backing it to that
-amount—at all events, with my own money. So,
-with an air of sham gravity, I listened, assuming as
-solid an air of wealth as I could on so short a
-notice, determined at the last moment to make
-the necessary fatal objections, which would finally
-effectually prevent my being saddled with the
-thing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The judge explained that the yacht had only
-just been left him by an uncle who had died very
-suddenly in the “Albany”; that it was in complete
-order, ready victualled and manned; that
-it had usually been sent round to the Riviera, and
-joined there overland by his uncle, who spent the
-winter months on board till the advent of spring
-enabled him to return to London; that there it
-was lying at Ryde, awaiting his orders, and that he
-had accidentally heard that Captain Evans, in default
-of instructions, was actually employing it
-for excursions on his own behalf, and taking the
-Ryde people for trips in the Solent and runs over
-to Bournemouth at so much a head when the
-weather was favorable; which would all have
-to be accounted for, added the judge, of course.
-It was a large yacht, of about four hundred
-tons, and, rather than be bothered with it, the
-judge would let it go for three thousand pounds.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why don’t you go down and see it,” he
-asked, “before you decide? And, if I were you,
-I wouldn’t let Evans know you are coming; if it’s
-a fine day, you are sure to catch him at some of
-his little games, and that’ll give you a hold over
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Three thousand pounds is ay large sum of
-money, judge,” objected Mr. Brentin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not bad; but then it’s a large yacht. Now
-look here, don’t you haggle with me,” he went
-on, irritably, “because I don’t like it. You can
-either take it or leave it. I won’t let it go for a
-penny less. Rather than that, I’ll go and live on
-board and spend my time crossing between Portsmouth
-and the island. I should be safe from
-her ladyship, at any rate, for even coming up in
-the lift upsets her.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We shook his hand and left him composing
-himself to receive Lady Hipkins again. She was
-walking up and down the corridor as we came
-out, and Mr. Brentin went up to her and bowed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The judge is real bad, ma’am,” he said, with
-great gravity, “and should not be left. He has
-been explaining to us what a comfort you and
-your reading are to him, and how much he looks
-forward to being taken down to Norwood and
-nursed back to his former robust health at your
-hands. If I may venture to advise, you should
-procure a hotel conveyance as soon as possible
-and drive him way down home by easy stages.
-The air in this city, ma’am, is not good for ay
-man of the judge’s temperament and physique.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You have a kind face,” her ladyship answered,
-in her strange, flat voice, “and mean
-kindly, I am sure. But I am extremely deaf,
-and have not heard one word you have said.
-Perhaps you would kindly write it down for me?”
-she added, handing him a little book.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s of no consequence,” bawled Mr. Brentin
-through his hands. “Good-afternoon!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why doesn’t the old shakes carry a trumpet”
-he said, angrily, as we went down-stairs.
-“What’s the matter with a trumpet?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the hall, before leaving him, I hastened to
-explain I had no thought of expending three
-thousand pounds in the purchase of Sir Anthony’s
-or any yacht whatsoever; that my contribution
-to the expedition would be the idea, and
-so many of the resolute men as I could lay hands
-on among my friends.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That will be all right, Mr. Blacker,” Brentin
-loftily replied; “I will see after the yacht portion
-of the affair. It can be made good to me, if I run
-short, out of the boodle, and, if it all fails, I have
-no doubt I shall have my money value in excitement.
-In the meantime, sir, let us waltz in and
-secure the yacht, to begin with. If you will be
-free in the morning, we will descend upon Ryde
-and Captain Evans. If we find him going to sea,
-so much the better; we shall have the opportunity
-of testing the sailing capacities of the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>.
-Good-day to you, sir. I have to thank
-you for infusing my exhossted veins with a breath
-of the true spirit of the forty-niners, who made
-the State of California what she is. The holding
-up of ay Sacramento bank will be nothing to
-this, sir, if we don’t spile—that is, spoil—it.”</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p60'>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-WE GO TO RYDE—THE <span class='it'>AMARANTH</span>—ACCIDENTAL MEETING
-WITH ARTHUR MASTERS AND HIS LADY FRIEND—I
-ENROLL HIM AMONG US PROVISIONALLY—WE DECIDE
-TO PURCHASE THE YACHT
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>I don’t</span> know that it would be altogether necessary
-to the course of the narrative of this work
-to say much about our visit to Ryde and the
-<span class='it'>Amaranth</span> were it not that, while there, we accidentally
-encountered Arthur Masters, an old
-friend and school-fellow of mine. He was staying
-at Seaview, and, being in a mazed condition
-of lovelornness (for nothing short of it would
-have induced him to neglect the harriers of which
-he is master in Hertfordshire), had come over for
-the day with the young lady, and was spending
-it there mainly on the pier, being uncommonly
-warm and fine for November.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Brentin and I had just arrived, and were
-keeping our weather-eye open for the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>,
-when we came on Arthur and his young lady sitting
-on the pier in the sun. She was introduced
-to us as Miss Rybot, and wore a straw-hat and a
-shirt, just as though it were summer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We told them we had come down about a
-yacht, and, if we could only find her, were thinking
-of making a small trial-trip across the Solent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we were talking and persuading them to
-accompany us, up comes a sailor in a blue jersey,
-with <span class='it'>Amaranth</span> across it in red, and hands us a
-printed bill.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquoter9'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>The</span> Amaranth, <span class='it'>fast steam-yacht (Captain Evans, Commander),
-will sail daily from Hyde pier-head (weather permitting)
-for a two hours’ trip in the Solent. Fares: Saloon,
-half a crown; fore cabin, one shilling</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Doing much business?” asked Mr. Brentin
-carelessly, cocking his eye on the man.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Pretty fair, mister,” the sailor replied, “when
-the weather’s like this. There’s a good few aboard
-already.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is there?” Mr. Brentin innocently remarked.
-“All right. Give Captain Evans Sir Anthony
-Hipkins’s compliments and say we will come
-aboard right away.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sir Anthony! Lord love you!” ejaculated
-the sailor, and was off pretty fast down to the
-pier-head.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We will give the captain a few minutes to
-clear out his Ryde friends,” observed Mr. Brentin
-with a wink, “and then we will pro-ceed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And, sure enough, as we got leisurely down to
-the pier-head there we found a boat just landing
-from the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>, half a dozen excursionists
-in her with hand-bags and bottles, talking fast
-among themselves and giving frightened glances
-back at the yacht lying in the tideway two or
-three hundred yards off.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Anything wrong on board, my friend?”
-drawled Mr. Brentin to a large, puce-faced man
-with a red comforter loosely knotted round his
-throat, as he clambered up the pier steps.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Anythin’ wrong?” echoed the terrified man.
-“Captain says rust ’as suddenly got into the b’ilers
-and ’e’s afraid they’ll bust. That’s all!—Mother,
-where’s Emma?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We shall have the ship to ourselves,” remarked
-Mr. Brentin. “Music provided, too.
-Sakes alive!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The music was a harp, a cornet, and a stout
-woman with a large accordion slung on her back.
-The cornettist, a battered-looking young man
-with one eye, carried a shell for collecting the
-money, and a camp-stool.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, don’t go!” drawled Mr. Brentin; “we
-have a passion for music on the waters.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Ave you?” cried the sarcastic cornettist.
-“Well, I ’ope you’ll like gittin’ blown up, too.
-Full steam a’ead, mates! Now then, missis, out
-of the way!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Off they all trooped together as fast as they
-could down the length of the pier, giving occasional
-frightened glances back at the yacht, which
-began to blow us a sycophantish salute with her
-whistle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The only person who will get blown up to-day,”
-observed Mr. Brentin as he took his seat
-in the boat, “will be Captain Evans.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All this time Miss Rybot had scarcely said a
-word. She was rather a haughty, not to say
-disagreeable-looking, young lady; tall, slightly
-freckled, with a high nose and a quantity of
-beautiful auburn hair. She appeared to take the
-situation with the utmost indifference, and not
-in the least to care whether she stayed on shore
-or went to sea and never came back. Altogether
-the sort of young lady who might lead an adorer
-rather a dance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Get under way at once, if you please, Captain
-Evans,” said Mr. Brentin, sternly, as we
-came on board and found the captain waiting
-for us, exceedingly alarmed, his cap in his hand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aye, aye, sir!” bleated the captain. “Where
-to?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Anywhere where we can give the yacht’s speed
-a fair trial. What’s the matter with our going
-round the island?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s nothing the matter with it, sir, that
-I am aware of,” answered the startled Evans.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then make it so! And then come and give
-me a few moments’ conversation in the saloon.
-For the use of which,” Mr. Brentin gravely
-added, “I do not propose to pay half a dollar.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aye, aye, sir!” And off we bustled towards
-Spithead.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where will you sit, Miss Rybot?” Masters
-asked, humbly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Anywhere out of the wind,” was the indifferent
-answer; “and be good enough, please, to
-leave me to myself for a little. I wish to collect
-my thoughts, and you have, no doubt, a good
-deal to talk over with your friend.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The unfortunate Masters found her a sheltered
-seat (which she soon left and selected another),
-wrapped her legs in a rug (which she promptly
-threw off), and then came and sat himself down
-by me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’s an orphan,” he whispered, biting his
-nails, “and has to teach. I met her at Seaview.
-She has forty pounds a year of her own, and has
-one little nasty pupil, whom she loathes. She’s a
-strict Roman Catholic, and talks of entering a
-convent, but she’s a good deal in debt, and wants
-to pay off her debts first. She talks of going to
-Monte Carlo and winning enough at the tables to
-pay her debts, and then becoming a Poor Clare.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A Poor Clare?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’re a strictly enclosed order,” he groaned;
-“they keep a perpetual fast, have no beds, and
-go barefooted. They spend all their time in
-prayer and meditation, and live on alms.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then they don’t marry, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t I tell you they’re strictly enclosed?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How long have you known her?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“About a month. I met her at a friend’s
-house at Seaview.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Have you said anything to her yet?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nothing very definite. I was going to to-day.
-But I don’t believe it will be any use,” he
-sighed; “she seems bent on the convent.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you think she suspects your attachment?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, she must by this time. I’ve given up
-several days’ golf for her. But she’s so confoundedly
-independent and thinks so badly of
-men. She fancies they’re all after her because
-she’s poor.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Extraordinary young person!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, she says that if a man knows a girl’s
-poor he always believes she’s only too ready to
-marry him, just to escape from teaching and secure
-a comfortable home. That’s the sort of girl
-she is; she swears she won’t be purchased. What
-am I to do? What do you advise?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I gave him plenty of sound advice, but could
-see he wasn’t attending to me. At last he roused
-himself to ask about my affairs. He had heard
-the Mabel Harker entanglement was over, and
-naturally supposed there was some one else. So
-off I went about Lucy and “The French Horn,”
-describing her minutely, and how unhappy I was,
-and how I was going down there at Christmas to
-make it all up, and that in the meantime—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then you would speak to her to-day and get
-some definite answer out of her?” he asked, biting
-his nails.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How can I to-day, when she’s miles away in
-the Ladbroke Grove Road?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Masters stared, and I saw, of course, he hadn’t
-been attending and was only thinking of himself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With his mind in so confused and despondent
-a condition, I judged the opportunity excellent
-to try and get him to join us; so, after a few cautious
-preliminaries, I drew closer and let him into
-the whole secret of our visit to Ryde and trial
-of the yacht, giving him to understand that Mr.
-Brentin was already one of the heads of the enterprise,
-and that, if I couldn’t get the necessary
-half-dozen resolute Englishmen, he would easily
-fill their places with the same number of ditto
-Americans, from the hotels in Northumberland
-Avenue; which would cause me some national
-shame, I said, and give me ground for fearing
-the ancient spirit of the country was really gone
-and dribbled off into mere stock-jobbing, as so
-many people assert—Drake and the Gilberts and
-Raleigh having shuffled into Capel Court, touting
-on curb-stones like Hamburg peddlers or
-ready-money pencillers, instead of taking the
-broad and daring road of nerve and valor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Further, I seductively pointed out there would
-be no sort of reason why Miss Rybot shouldn’t
-be of the party and try legitimately to win enough
-at the tables to pay her debts, if her heart was
-set on it; which would free her from all obligation
-towards him and bring about their marriage
-in the most natural way; and that if a chaperon
-were needed, I would engage to supply one,
-whether the young lady went to Monte Carlo by
-land or by sea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I had already experienced, different men
-take an announcement of this high order in different
-ways—some are shocked, some incredulous;
-some see all the difficulties at once, some
-never see any. As for Arthur Masters, he was in
-such a state of depression that I believe if I had
-said, “Arthur, we are going North to root up the
-Pole; will you make one?” he’d have answered,
-“Delighted!” and been off to Beale &amp; Inman’s at
-once to order the necessary outfit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At all events, what he did say was, that if Miss
-Rybot could be induced to come, he would certainly
-come too, and do his best, charging himself
-with the duty of feeling his way with her,
-and promising to let me know the result as soon
-as possible. He only stipulated he should not
-be away longer than a fortnight in January, because
-of his harriers, which all this time were
-being rather inefficiently hunted by his younger
-brother and the dog boy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We got back safely to Ryde, thoroughly satisfied
-with our outing and the behavior of the
-<span class='it'>Amaranth</span>, and caught the six-o’clock train back
-to Victoria.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Brentin had unfortunately taken a strong
-dislike to Miss Rybot, and imitated her cold,
-haughty “Really! you don’t say so!” and other
-stand-offish little speeches, most of the way up.
-The imitation was not in the least like, of course,
-but served to show me the scornful bent of his
-mind towards her. When I told him I had secured
-Masters on the condition she came too, he
-grew quite angry, and declared that whatever
-route she took he should most certainly take the
-other, rather than be frozen in her society. He
-added, as a further ground of dislike, she was
-“pop-eyed”—a somewhat unjust description of
-her slightly prominent, large, cold, gray optics.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As for Captain Evans and his little game of
-using the yacht for excursions on his own account,
-the captain had given the, to me, rather
-lame explanation that yachts left idle came to no
-good, and should, in short, be taken out for exercise
-just like horses. Questioned why he didn’t
-go out without company, he averred he must
-have ballast or the yacht would throb her sides
-out, and that he thought he might as well make
-the ballast pay. Also that he had kept a most
-careful record of receipts, and was prepared to
-account for every farthing to the rightful owners,
-whoever they should turn out to be.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In short, as is so often the case, Captain Evans
-had managed to prove quite conclusively that Mr.
-Brentin was entirely in the wrong in suspecting
-his proceedings, and that he was a much injured
-and wholly innocent British sailor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That, sir,” said Mr. Brentin, chewing his
-cigar as we rattled along in the train, “has happened
-to me more than once with your lower
-orders. I go into my tailor’s with my noo coat
-bulging at the back, bursting with ay sense of
-injury at the misfit considering the price I have
-paid. And that tailor keeps cool while I stamp
-around; he surveys me with ay pitying smile, he
-calls up his assistants to admire the fit, and he
-proves to me con-clusively that the best part of
-that coat is precisely the bulge in the back, and
-that I shall injure his reputation and ruin the
-coat if I have it touched. I enter that store,
-sir, like ay raging lion, and I leave it ay teething
-lamb, my mouth overflowing with apologies,
-which the damn tailor will scarcely accept. And
-I know he thinks, ‘What infernal fools these
-Yankees are!’ and is laafing at me in his sleeve
-as the bulge and I disappear in the crowd of his
-other misfits, and are lost in the night of his paid
-accounts.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That same evening the purchase of the yacht
-was concluded by Mr. Brentin, as he wrote me
-in the morning; directing me, further, to go right
-ahead and get the rest of my desperadoes together
-for a dash on the tables in January. He added
-in a postscript that, for his part, he was going
-into the city early next morning to buy three
-fair-sized cannon, capable of throwing three fair-sized
-shells; for, in case anything went wrong
-and we were captured, it would be just as well
-to leave orders with Captain Evans to shell the
-Casino, and so continue till we were released and
-replaced on board the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>, with a guarantee
-for our expenses, and an undertaking for no
-further molestation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bold as I am, owing in some measure to my
-militia training, the rapidity of the American
-mind was again causing me some considerable
-qualms.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p70'>CHAPTER IX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-MY SISTER’S SUSPICIONS—HEROES OF <span class='it'>THE ARGO</span>—MY
-SISTER DETERMINES TO COME WITH US AS CHAPERON
-TO MISS RYBOT
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>From</span> now right on to Christmas I lived in a
-constant hurry and ferment of excitement; for
-not only was I full of every sort of preparation
-for our adventure, but every day brought me
-nearer “The French Horn” and my seeing
-dear Lucy once more. By the second week in
-December I had at last got our party of six
-together; to which number, for the present, at
-any rate, by Mr. Brentin’s advice, it was determined
-to limit it. If it were to be done at all,
-he said, six could easily do it, and by adding
-more we were only increasing the danger of the
-affair leaking out and the people at the tables
-being forewarned and forearmed; neither of
-which, though more particularly the latter, did
-we at all desire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Directly the party was complete, I informed
-Mr. Brentin, and by his directions gave them all
-a rendezvous at “The French Horn” for Christmas.
-He wished to see us all together he said,
-and take our measure; not that he doubted I
-had chosen the right sort, but rather that he
-might consider what post should be assigned to
-each—who should lead the van and who should
-guard the rear, and who, if necessary, should
-form the reserve and direct the shell-throwing
-on the Casino in case of our capture.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meantime I had been so busy running over
-the country, interviewing and persuading, and
-by many being point-blank refused, that I had
-quite neglected my sister, Mrs Rivers, and Medworth
-Square; and whether it was she suspected
-something from my continued absence, or something
-had leaked out through Parker White, I
-never could quite discover; but, at any rate, she
-one day sent for me to come to tea, and attacked
-me at once to know what I was doing and why
-I never came to the house.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From very early days my sister Muriel has
-been my confidante in everything. My father I
-scarcely remember, beyond the fact that he
-always wore a white waistcoat and smelt of
-sherry when he kissed me, and my dear mother
-died in Jubilee year—a very sad year, notwithstanding
-the universal illuminations and rejoicings,
-for me; so to Muriel I have always carried
-all my troubles and griefs, and no better sister
-for that sort of work could any man wish for.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Particularly has she always been the sympathetic
-recipient of my love-affairs, with the
-single exception of my affair with Lucy; for
-though Muriel isn’t in the least a snob, yet I
-don’t suppose she would have been best pleased
-to learn of her only brother’s attachment to an
-innkeeper’s daughter, of however old a family.
-So all she knew was that the Mabel Harker
-business was at an end, and was naturally wondering
-how my vagrant heart was being employed
-meantime; questions on which subject, however,
-I had always managed to shirk.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Directly we were alone in the Medworth Square
-morning-room, she opened fire on me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Frank has been asking what has become of
-you lately, Vincent,” she said—“what have you
-been doing with yourself?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve been seeing a good deal of some Americans
-at the ‘Victoria,’ and a good deal in and out
-of town.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nothing else?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nothing of any importance. How’s Mollie?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can go and see Mollie afterwards. Now,
-look here, Vincent, you’re up to something, and I
-mean to know what it is. I can’t have my only
-brother drifting into a scrape, without doing my
-best to keep him out of it. You’d better make
-a clean breast. I shall be sure to find out.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I’d half a mind to tell her a downright fib and
-stop her importunities that way; but I’d the instinct
-she knew something of the fact, and was
-well aware that, if she weren’t told all, would
-set her prig of a husband to work; and then
-our enterprise would as likely as not be nipped
-in the bud by being made public property.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So, on the whole, I judged it best to tell her
-exactly what we were doing and were going to
-do, taking care only to bind her over to the completest
-secrecy, which, once she had given her
-word, I knew she would die sooner than break.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was half amused, half frightened, and at
-first wholly incredulous.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But who on earth have you found to join
-you in such a cracked scheme?” she asked. “I
-didn’t know you’d so many desperate lunatics
-among your acquaintances.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, there’s Arthur Masters and Bob Hines,
-to begin with; you know them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t think I know Mr. Hines, do I?
-Who is he?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, he was at Marlborough with me, and
-now keeps a boys’ school at Folkestone.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A nice instructor of youth, to go on an
-expedition of this kind,” laughed my sister.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s exactly what he’s afraid of; he says
-if he’s caught, it’ll be the end of his business
-and he’ll have to break stones.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then why does he go?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, you see, he’s very much in want of a
-gymnasium for his boys, and I’ve promised to
-build him one out of the swag, if he’ll join us.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Tempted and fallen!” said my sister.
-“Really, Vincent, you’re a Mephistopheles.
-And who else?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Harold Forsyth, of the Devon Borderers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is that the little man who always looks as if
-he was bursting out of his clothes with overeating?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I dare say.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But I thought he was engaged to be married.
-What’s the young lady about, to let him go?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, the fact is,” said I, “the young lady
-turns out to be a wrong un, and is now chasing
-him about with a writ for breach of promise in
-her glove, like a cab-fare.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So he’s off to escape that?” said my sister.
-“You’re a nice lot. Any one else?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Teddy Parsons, in my militia.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s a poor creature,” my sister observed.
-“I shouldn’t take him; why, all he can do is
-play the banjo and walk about Southport in
-breeches and gaiters!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, but he’s an old friend, and I want to do
-him a good turn.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ve odd notions of doing people a good
-turn,” Muriel laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The fact is,” I said, “he’s rather in a hole
-about a bill of his that’s coming due. He’s gone
-shares with one of our fellows in the regiment
-in a steeple-chaser and given him a bill to meet
-the expenses of training and the purchase; and
-as the bill’s coming due and he’s mortally afraid
-of his father—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You undertake to meet the bill, on the condition
-he joins you. I see. And has that been
-the best you can do? Who’s the sixth?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mr. Brentin, who’s bought the yacht; the
-American at the ‘Victoria.’ ”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, all I can say is,” said my sister, after
-a pause, “you’re rather a lame crew. Why,
-Teddy Parsons alone is enough to ruin anything!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, I know,” I groaned, “but what is one
-to do? I’ve been all over the country seeing
-men, but they’re all much too frightened. We’re
-an utterly scratch lot, I know, but Brentin and I
-must do the best we can with the material and
-trust to luck.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That you most certainly will have to do,”
-said my sister, with conviction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why can’t you come with us,” I urged, “and
-be the mascot of the party? We must have
-some one of the kind, if only to chaperon Miss
-Rybot.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dear me, who’s Miss Rybot?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Arthur Masters’s young woman, without whom
-he won’t stir.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now my sister Muriel is like a good many other
-highly respectable Englishwomen: she is a most
-faithful wife and devoted mother, but she doesn’t
-care in any particular degree about her husband,
-and is only too glad to welcome anything in the
-way of honest excitement, if only to break the
-monotony of home life. And here was excitement
-for her, indeed, and, properly regarded, of
-the most irreproachably honest description.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It flattered, too, her love of adventure, for which
-she had never had much outlet in Medworth
-Square. Where we Blackers get our love of adventure
-from, by-the-way, I don’t quite know,
-unless it be from my mother’s father, who fought
-at Waterloo, and died a very old gentleman, a
-Knight of Windsor; but we certainly both of us
-have it very strongly, as all good English people
-should.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To cut a long story short, for I must really be
-getting on, my sister finally agreed to come, if
-only as chaperon to Miss Rybot. Like the rest
-of us, she had never been to Monte Carlo, having
-been hitherto forbidden by her husband; but now
-she said she would insist, and allege as a reason
-the necessity of her presence for keeping her only
-brother from ruining himself at the tables.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So I was delighted to hear of her plucky resolve,
-particularly as it at once got rid of the difficulty
-of Miss Rybot’s chaperon—since Brentin
-had made up his mind not to take his wife, but
-send her down to Rochester while he was away,
-and keep her fully employed there, in Charles
-Dickens’s country.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I kissed my sister, promising to come back to
-dinner, and meantime went up in the nursery,
-where I found my niece Mollie seated by the fire,
-wrapped in a grimy little shawl, reading Grimm’s
-<span class='it'>Fairy Tales</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p77'>CHAPTER X</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-MR. BRENTIN’S INDISCRETION—LUCY AND I MAKE IT UP—BAILEY
-THOMPSON APPEARS IN CHURCH—ON CHRISTMAS
-DAY WE HOLD A COUNCIL OF WAR
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Now</span> it was the very day we went down to
-“The French Horn” together that Mr. Brentin
-confessed to me how, in spite of our agreement
-as to keeping the affair a profound secret,
-he had actually been so rash as to confide our
-whole plan to a stranger—a stranger casually encountered,
-above all places, in the smoking-room
-of the “Victoria”!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>How incomprehensible, how weak and wavering
-is man! Here was Julius C. Brentin, as
-shrewd an American as can be met with in Low’s
-Exchange, deliberately pouring into a strange
-ear a secret he had hitherto rigidly guarded even
-from his young and attractive wife.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of course he had his excuses and defence;
-what man has not, when he does wrong? But
-whatever the excuse, there still remained the unpleasant
-fact that there was positively a man
-walking about (and from his description one
-evidently not quite a gentleman) who knew all
-about our arrangements and could at any moment
-communicate them to the authorities at Monte
-Carlo.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When I asked him, somewhat sharply, how ever
-he had come to commit so gross a blunder, he
-had really no explanation to give. He seemed
-to think he had sufficiently safeguarded himself
-by exchanging cards with the man, than which I
-could not conceive anything more childish—</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<div class='literal-container' style=''><div class='literal'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line'><span class='it'>MR. BAILEY THOMPSON</span></p>
-</div></div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>without an address or a club on it! What possible
-guarantee was there in that? Brentin himself
-couldn’t quite say; only he seemed to fancy
-the possession of his card gave him some sort of
-hold on the owner, and that so long as he had it
-in his keeping we were safe against treachery.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>How totally wrong he was, and how nearly his
-absurd confidence came to absolutely ruining us
-all, will clearly appear as this work goes on and
-readers are taken to Monte Carlo.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last, as I continued to reproach him, he
-took refuge in saying, “Well, it’s done, and
-there’s an end to it; give over talking through
-your hat!” A vulgar Americanism which much
-offended me, and caused us to drive up to “The
-French Horn” in somewhat sulky silence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was the 23d of December, and we found Mr.
-Thatcher ready for us. I at once left him to
-show Brentin over the house, the great hall decorated
-with holly and cotton-wool mottoes, and
-to his room, while I went in immediate search
-of Lucy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Over that tender meeting I draw the sacred
-veil of reticence. The dear girl was soon in my
-arms, soft and palpitating, full of forgiveness
-and love. We spent the afternoon together in
-a long walk across the links and down to the
-coast-guards’ cottages, where we had tea; returning
-only in time for dinner, through the
-dark and starry evening of that singularly mild
-December.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The result of our walk was that we made up
-our minds to be married shortly before Easter—so
-soon, in fact, as I could get back from abroad and
-settle my affairs. About Monte Carlo, I told
-her nothing further than that my sister was not
-well, and I had undertaken to escort her there,
-and see after her for a time—a fib, which, knowing
-Lucy’s apprehensive nature, I judged to be
-necessary, and for which I trust one day to be
-forgiven.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Brentin and I dined together, partly in
-silence, partly snapping at each other. On
-Christmas Eve our party was complete, with the
-exception of Harold Forsyth, who came over next
-morning from Colchester. On Christmas Day,
-“What’s the matter with our all going to
-Church?” said Mr. Brentin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nothing particularly the matter,” Bob Hines
-replied, rather gruffly, “except that some of us
-are probably unaccustomed to it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>However, Brentin insisted, and to Church,
-accordingly, we all went, as meek as bleating
-lambs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now in the Wharton Park pew was sitting
-Mr. Crage. The pew is so sheltered with its
-high partition and curtain-rods, I didn’t see him
-till he stood up; nor did I know there was any
-one else there till the parson glared down
-straight into the pew from the clerk’s ancient
-seat under the pulpit, whence he read the lessons,
-and said he really must beg chance members
-of the congregation to observe the proper
-reverential attitude, and not be continually
-seated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whereupon a deep voice replied, amid considerable
-sensation, from the bowels of the pew,
-“Sir, you are in error. I always rise as the rubric
-directs, but having no advantage of height—”
-the rest of the speech being lost in the irreverent
-titters of our party.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brentin, who was next the pew, looked over
-the partition and added to the sensation by
-audibly observing, “Sakes alive! It’s friend
-Bailey Thompson.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When the service was over and we all got outside,
-he whispered, “Wait a minute, Blacker;
-send the others on, and I’ll present you to my
-friend.” So the others went on back to “The
-French Horn,” while I remained behind with
-some apprehension and curiosity to take this
-Mr. Bailey Thompson’s measure. He came out
-alone, Mr. Crage remaining to have a few words
-with the parson (with whom he was continually
-squabbling), and Brentin and Bailey Thompson
-greeted each other with great warmth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He turned out to be a short, dark, determined-looking
-little man, with a square chin and old-fashioned,
-black, mutton-chop whiskers. No,
-he was clearly not quite a gentleman, in the
-sense that he had evidently never been at a
-public school.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This,” said Mr. Brentin as he presented me,
-“is the originator of the little scheme I was telling
-you of—Mr. Vincent Blacker.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, indeed!” Mr. Bailey Thompson replied,
-looking me full in the face with his penetrating
-black eyes, and politely lifting his small,
-tall hat. “Oh, indeed! so you really meant
-it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Meant it?” echoed Brentin. “Why, the band
-of brothers is here; they were in the pew next
-you. Mr. Bailey Thompson, we are all here together
-for the making of our final arrangements,
-and in two weeks we start.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, indeed!” he smiled; “it’s a bold piece of
-work.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sir, it is colossal, but it will succeed!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let us hope so. I am sure I wish you every
-success.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mr. Bailey Thompson,” said Brentin, evidently
-nettled at the way the little man continued
-incredulously to smile, “if you care to join
-us some time during the afternoon we shall be
-glad to lay details of our plan before you. They
-will not only prove our <span class='it'>bona-fides</span>, but show how
-complete and fully thought out all our preparations
-are.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I can leave my friend Crage towards four
-o’clock, I will,” Mr. Thompson replied. “I know
-Monte Carlo as well as most men, and may be
-able to give you some useful hints.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We shall be glad to see you, for none of us
-have ever been there. But not a word to your
-friend!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not a word to a soul!” smiled the imperturbable
-little man; and he left us to join the abandoned
-Crage, who was still inside the sacred edifice
-snarling at the parson.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was quite useless saying anything further to
-Brentin. I merely contented myself with pointing
-out that if anything could make me suspect
-Mr. Bailey Thompson, it was his being the guest
-of Mr. Crage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Pawsibly!” drawled Mr. Brentin. “I don’t
-pretend the man is pure-bred, nor exactly fit at
-this moment to take his seat at Queen Victoria’s
-table; but that he’s stanch, with that square
-chin, I will stake my bottom dollar. And seeing
-how well he knows the locality, we shall learn
-something from him, sir, which, you may depend
-upon, will be highly useful.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The attitude of the band of brothers so far had
-been rather of the negative order. Whether their
-enthusiasm was cooling, as they had been employing
-their spare time in pitifully surveying
-the difficulties and danger of the scheme, instead
-of the glory and the profit, I know not; but,
-obviously, neither on Christmas Eve nor Christmas
-morning were they any longer in the hopeful
-condition in which they were when I first
-approached and secured them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That they had been talking the matter over
-among themselves was clear, for no sooner was
-the Christmas fare disposed of in the great hall
-than they began to open fire. Their first shot
-was discharged when Mr. Thatcher brought us
-in a bowl of punch, about three o’clock, and
-Brentin proceeded to charge their glasses, and
-desire them to drink to the affair and our successful
-return therefrom.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They drank the toast so half-heartedly, much
-as Jacobites when called on to pledge King
-George, that Brentin lost his temper.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Gentlemen!” he cried, thumping the table,
-“if you cannot drink to our success with more
-<span class='it'>momentum</span> than that, you will never do for adventurers;
-you may as well stay right here and
-till the soil. And that’s all there is to it!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s the matter with eating fat bacon
-under a hedge?” growled Bob Hines. He had
-been much nettled at the way Brentin had taken
-us all in charge, and more particularly at his
-being ordered off to church. Hence his not
-altogether apposite interruption.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brentin fixed him with his glittering, beady
-eyes. “Mr. Hines,” he said, “if you are the
-spokesman of the malecontents, I am perfectly
-ready to hear what you have to object.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You are very good,” Hines replied, stiffly,
-“but I imagined the scheme was Blacker’s, and
-not yours at all.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The scheme is the scheme,” said Brentin,
-impatiently. “Neither one man’s nor another’s.
-Either you go in with us or you do not; now,
-then, take your choice, right here and now.
-You know all about it, what we are going to do
-and how we are going to do it. There are no
-flies on the scheme, any more than there are on
-us. We don’t care ay ginger-snap whether you
-withdraw or not; but at least we have the right
-to know which course you intend to pursue.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The difficulty appears to me,” Forsyth struck
-in, in conciliatory tones, “that none of us have
-ever been to the place, so that we can’t really
-tell whether the thing is possible or not.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Exactly!” murmured Teddy Parsons.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brentin gave a gesture of vexation. “Monte
-Carlo has, of course, been thoroughly surveyed
-before this determination of ours has been arrived
-at—from a distance, ay considerable distance, I
-admit. Still, it has been surveyed, though, naturally,
-through other parties’ eyes. Every authority
-we have consulted agrees that the thing is
-perfectly feasible; every one, without exception,
-wonders why it has never been done before;
-every one admits it is a plague-spot which should
-be cauterized. Shall we do it? Yes or no?
-There is the whole thing in ay nutshell.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Teddy Parsons observed, “There is one thing
-I should like to know, and that is—er—will there
-be any bloodshed?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not unless they shed it,” was Brentin’s somewhat
-grim reply.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Teddy shuddered and went on, “But I understand
-we are actually to be armed with revolvers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That is so,” said Brentin, “but they will not
-be loaded, or with blank cartridge at the most.
-Experience tells us that gentlemen are just as
-badly frightened by an unloaded as by a loaded
-gun.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then Arthur Masters struck in, “I suppose
-there will be likely to be a good deal of hustling
-and possibly violence before we can count on
-getting clear away?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t apprehend,” said Brentin, “there
-will be much of either; though, of course, we
-can’t expect the affair will pass off quite so
-quietly as an ordinary social lunch-party. We
-may, for instance, have to knock a few people
-down. Surely English gentlemen are not afraid
-of having to do that?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It is not a question of fear,” Masters haughtily
-replied. “I’m not thinking of that.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hear! Hear!” cried that snipe Parsons.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am thinking of the ladies of our party.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s a very pretty girl here,” Parsons
-ventured. “I wish she could be persuaded—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Forsyth nudged him, while I cried “Order!”
-savagely.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There will be ladies in our party,” Masters
-went on. “It would be a terrible thing if they
-were to be frightened or in any way injured.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I yield to no man,” declaimed Brentin, “in
-my chivalrous respect for the sex. But there
-are certain places and times when the presence
-of ladies is highly undesirable. The Casino
-rooms at Monte Carlo, when we are about to
-raid them, is one. That’s the reason which has
-determined me to leave Mrs. Brentin behind, in
-complete ignorance of what we are about to do.
-I do not presume to dictate to other gentlemen
-what their course of action should be, but I must
-say our chances of success will be enormously
-magnified if no ladies are permitted to be of the
-party.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hear! Hear!” murmured Hines, who from
-a certain gruffness of manner is no particular
-favorite with the sex.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps it would be enough,” urged Masters,
-“if, on the actual day of our attempt, the ladies
-of our party undertook not to go into the rooms?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps it would,” Brentin replied, “but
-for myself I should prefer they remained altogether
-in England, offering up a series of succinct
-and heartfelt prayers for our safe return.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bob Hines gave a snort of laughter, whereupon
-Brentin fixed him inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Englishwomen have prayed for the safe return
-of heroes before now, Mr. Hines.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am aware of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then why gurgle at the back of your throat?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I have a certain irrepressible sense of humor.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That is remarkable for an Englishman!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whether Mr. Brentin were deliberately bent
-on rubbing us all up the wrong way, I don’t
-know, but he was most certainly doing it, so I
-thought it judicious to interpose. It was just at
-that moment Mr. Bailey Thompson stepped into
-the room.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p87'>CHAPTER XI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-MR. BAILEY THOMPSON GIVES US HIS INGENIOUS ADVICE—WE
-ARE FOOLS ENOUGH TO TRUST HIM—MISPLACED
-CONFIDENCE
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='sc'>The</span> very man!” cried Brentin. “Mr. Bailey
-Thompson, let me present you to my friends.
-You are just in time to give them assurance of
-the feasibility of the great scheme you and I have
-already had some discussion over.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now Bailey Thompson’s name had been cursorily
-mentioned during dinner as that of a gentleman
-who might look in in the course of the afternoon,
-and, if he came, would be able to give
-us some useful hints; but, beyond that, Brentin
-had kept him back as a final card, having already
-some notion of the wavering going on, and desiring
-to use him to clinch the business one way or
-the other.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Thompson bowed and smiled, and Brentin
-went on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There is some dissatisfaction in the camp,
-sir; there is some doubt and there is fear. Advice
-is badly needed. I look to you to give it
-us.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shall be very glad to be of any use.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then let me present you, Mr. Thompson.
-This powerful young man with the leonine head
-and cherry-wood pipe is Mr. Hines; next him,
-with the slight frame, tawny mustache, and
-Richmond Gem cigarette, is Mr. Parsons; opposite,
-with the clean, clear, and agreeable countenance
-and the cigar, is Mr. Forsyth; next him,
-with the sloping brow and thoughtful back to his
-head, is Mr. Masters, who doesn’t smoke. Vincent
-Blacker you know. Gentlemen, Mr. Bailey
-Thompson. There is your glass, sir; drink, and
-when you feel sufficiently stimulated and communicative,
-speak!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Thompson darted his penetrating eyes over
-the company, smiled again, and took his glass of
-tepid punch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So you really mean it,” he said, sitting between
-us.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Brentin groaned. “Don’t let us hear that
-from you again, sir,” he said; “it is likely to
-breed bad blood. Take it from me, we really
-mean it, and only need advice how it should best
-be done. Mr. Bailey Thompson, we are all attention.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In the first place, then,” the little man remarked,
-amid dead silence, as he sipped his
-punch, “let me say you have, in my judgment,
-enormously underestimated the amount of money
-in the rooms.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I know the place well, and speak with some
-authority.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Just what we want.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now, there are nine roulette and four trente-et-quarante
-tables. Each, I am told, is furnished
-with £4000 to begin play on for the day; total,
-£52,000.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mark this, gentlemen!” cried the agitated
-Brentin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But each table wins per diem, roughly speaking,
-about £400; so that, if you select, say, ten
-o’clock in the evening for your attempt, you may
-count on £5200 more—total, say, £58,000.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Make a note, gentlemen,” said Brentin,
-“that we select ten-thirty, to make sure.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That does not take into account the money
-lying there already staked by the players, which
-you may calculate as fully £3000 more.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, go slow, Mr. Bailey Thompson, sir, go
-slow!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But where your underestimation is most
-marked,” said the impressive little man, sweeping
-his eyes round the attentive circle, “is in
-calculating the reserve in the vaults. In short,
-I have no hesitation in saying that, taking everything
-into consideration, there must be at least
-half a million of money lying in the Casino
-premises, at—the—very—least!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the dead silence, broken only by the taking
-in of breath, I could hear Lucy playing the
-piano down-stairs in the little room behind the
-bar.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Thompson sipped his punch again and
-looked at us calmly over the rim of his tumbler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And you think the money in the vaults is
-as easily got at as the rest?” Bob Hines asked,
-in a constrained voice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That I shouldn’t like to say,” Thompson
-cautiously replied. “I can tell you, however,
-that I have myself twice seen the bank broken;
-which only means, by-the-way, that the £4000 at
-that particular table had been won.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And what happened?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Play at that table was merely suspended
-while a further supply was being fetched from
-the vaults.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And where are the vaults?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Below the building somewhere, but precisely
-where I cannot tell you; but I have no doubt,
-once the rooms are in your possession, and, given
-the time, you would have no difficulty whatever
-in breaking into them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Impressive silence again, broken at last by
-Brentin. “And now, sir, will you be good
-enough to give us some idea of the amount of
-opposition we are likely to meet with?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bailey Thompson looked meditative, and, after
-a pause, proceeded. “Outside the building, at
-every twenty paces or so, you will find men stationed.
-They are merely firemen, whose chief
-duty it is to see no bomb is thrown into the
-rooms or deposited outside by the anarchists,
-who have frequently threatened it. They are
-not soldiers, and are not in any way armed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Teddy Parsons breathed heavily and murmured,
-“Capital!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And what force is there inside?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There are a great number of men about, attendants
-and so forth, but I cannot conceive
-them capable of any resistance.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You don’t imagine they are secretly armed?”
-asked the palpitating Teddy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dear me, no, any more than the attendants
-at an ordinary club!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In short,” said Mr. Brentin, “you feel
-pretty confident that neither inside nor outside
-we are likely to encounter a single weapon of
-offence?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perfectly confident. Perfectly confident,
-gentlemen.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And what about the army?” Parsons asked.
-“I understand the Prince of Monaco has an army
-of seventy men.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Quite correct,” Bailey Thompson replied,
-“but it is stationed up in Monaco, at least a
-mile away.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then it would be some time before they
-could be mustered.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Besides,” Mr. Brentin dryly observed, “they
-are not likely to be of much use unless they
-can swim. We propose to escape on board the
-<span class='it'>Amaranth</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s your best chance, gentlemen,” said Mr.
-Thompson—“in fact, your only practicable one.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And you think six of us are enough for the
-business?” asked Masters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You will be the best judges of that, perhaps,
-when you see the place. My own feeling is that,
-to make it all perfectly safe, you should be at
-least a dozen.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If necessary,” said Mr. Brentin, “we can
-always impress half a dozen of our crew. Nothing
-like a jolly Jack-tar for a job of this kind.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you do,” smiled Bailey Thompson, “you
-will have to fig them out in what they call <span class='it'>tenue
-de ville convenable</span>. They won’t let them into
-the rooms in their common sailor dress. Why,
-gentlemen, they refused me admission once because
-my boots were dusty. Clean hands don’t
-so much matter,” he added, in his sly fashion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then he rose and remarked, “I must now be
-returning to Wharton; my poor old friend Crage
-is in low spirits, and I have undertaken not to
-be more than half an hour away from him. If
-there is any further information wanted, however—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Just this,” said Hines; “taking it at its
-worst, and supposing we are all, or any of us, captured,
-what do you imagine will be our fate?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Thompson shrugged his shoulders. “You
-will be treated with every courtesy; you will undoubtedly
-be tried, but—if only from the fact of
-your failing—you will, I should think, be let off
-easily. If you succeed, and all of you get clear
-away, I do not imagine there will be any serious
-pursuit, for policy will close the authorities’
-mouth; they will not care to advertise to the
-world how easily the place can be looted. In
-fact, from what I know of them, they will most
-likely take particular pains to deny it has ever
-been done at all. You see, gentlemen, the entire
-Continental press is in their pay.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There is, no doubt, a criminal court and a
-prison at Monaco?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh yes; and if, unfortunately, you are caught,
-you will all be sentenced for life, I imagine.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t call that being let off easy,” grunted
-Teddy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps not in theory, but in practice, yes;
-for in a year or so you will find yourselves free to
-stroll about the town, and even down to Monte
-Carlo.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In fact, bolt?” said Masters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Exactly; more especially if your relatives pay
-due attention to the jailers and see they want
-for nothing. In conclusion, gentlemen, I drink
-to your enterprise, and wish you all well through
-it. <span class='it'>Au revoir!</span>” And with a courteous bow and
-wave of his gloved hand (he wore dogskin gloves
-the whole time), Mr. Bailey Thompson, accompanied
-by the jubilant Brentin, withdrew.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” I said, “what do you say now?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a brief silence, and then Teddy Parsons
-observed, “It seems to me we may as well go.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Half a million of money!” murmured Forsyth,
-meditatively, “and most of it for hospitals.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I think, out of <span class='it'>that</span>, you might manage to
-stand me a swimming-bath as well as a gymnasium,
-eh?” whispered Bob Hines.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Brentin returned to us radiant. “Well,
-gentlemen, what do you think of it all now?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They are coming,” I ventured to say, and the
-band of brothers nodded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But, I say!” spluttered Masters, who had for
-the most part kept silent—“who is Mr. Bailey
-Thompson? Who knows anything about him?
-Who can guarantee he won’t give us away to the
-Monte Carlo people, and have us all quodded before
-we can even get a look in?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Brentin frowned. “I will answer for Mr.
-Thompson with my life!” he cried. “He is a
-gentleman of the most royal integrity. I have
-studied him in every social relation, and I never
-knew him fail.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, well, that’ll do,” interrupted Bob Hines,
-who had all along shown some impatience at
-Brentin’s long speeches. “We only want to
-know somebody is responsible for his not selling
-us, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A responsibility Mr. Brentin undertook with
-the greatest cheerfulness and readiness, and that,
-mind you, for a man who turned out to be Scotland
-Yard personified—who, but for his inane
-jealousy of the French police and his desire
-to effect our capture single-handed, would have
-been the means of casting five highly strung English
-gentlemen, and one excitable American, into
-lifelong chains; and who, on the very morning
-after his interview with us (as he afterwards
-confessed to me), was actually at Whitehall concerting
-plans with the authorities there how best
-to catch us <span class='it'>in flagrante delicto</span>!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>How, on the contrary, we caught <span class='it'>him</span>, and had
-him deported to the southernmost point of Greece,
-forms one of my choicest memories, and will now
-soon be related at sufficient length.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p95'>CHAPTER XII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-MONTE CARLO—MR. VAN GINKEL’S YACHT <span class='it'>SARATOGA</span>—WE
-PROSPECT—FORTUNATE DISCOVERY OF THE POINT OF
-ATTACK—FIRST VISIT TO THE ROOMS
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>It</span> was a brilliant January day, mild and sunny,
-when Mr. Brentin, Parsons, and I were standing
-in the old bastion on the point of Monaco, straining
-our gaze for a glimpse of the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>. In
-front stretched the flickering, shifting pavement
-of the Mediterranean, of a deep, smooth sapphire,
-ruffled here and there, as the nap of a hat
-brushed the wrong way. Nothing to be seen on
-it but the one loose white sail of a yacht drifting
-out of harbor past the point.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We had strolled up the long ramp from the
-Condamine and through the gateway leading to
-the old bastions, chiefly to see whether they were
-provided with guns; we were relieved to find
-they were not—mere peaceable flower-walks, in
-fact, and already blossoming with geranium.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the unfinished cathedral behind us in the
-old town, crushed and huddled together like a
-Yorkshire fishing village, came the rolling throb
-of the heavy mid-day bell; up from the harbor
-far below, the smart bugle-call of a French corvette.
-Little figures in white ran about the deck,
-and the tricolor fluttered from the peak. Close
-alongside her lay an American yacht, the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span>,
-belonging to Mr. Van Ginkel, a former
-friend of Mr. Brentin’s. Both the vessels caused
-us a considerable amount of uneasiness; the corvette
-carried guns, the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span> was noted for
-her speed. It was quite uncertain how long they
-might continue to grace the harbor. One could
-easily blow us out of the water; the other could
-just as easily give us an hour’s start, take fifty
-men on board, pursue, overhaul, and bring us
-back, flushed though in other respects we might
-be with victory.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We had already been three days in Monte
-Carlo, and so far there had been no sign of their
-departure. “If the worst comes,” said Mr.
-Brentin, “we must take Van Ginkel into our
-confidence and indooce him to take a trip over
-to San Remo on the night of our attempt. The
-mischief is, I am so little of his acquaintance
-now I hesitate to ask so great a favor.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What sort of man is he?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, sir, we were classmates at Harvard in
-’60. Since then, though full of good-will, we
-have scarcely met. I understand, however, he
-has some stomach trouble, and is ay considerable
-invalid.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Married?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Di-vorced. Mrs. Van Ginkel is now the
-Princess Danleno, of Rome, a widow of large
-wealth. She owns the Villa Camellia at Cannes,
-and is over here constantly, in the season, they
-tell me. She plays heavily on a highly ingenious
-and complicated system of her own, which costs
-her about as much as the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span> costs her former
-husband.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We had taken up our abode at the “Hôtel Monopôle”—a
-hotel recommended to us by Mr. Bailey
-Thompson, by-the-way, for purposes of his own.
-It is a quiet little house, up the hill, and not far
-from the “Victoria”; there we had safely arrived
-three days before—Parsons, Brentin, Bob Hines,
-and I. Forsyth, Masters, my sister Mrs. Rivers,
-and Miss Rybot had embarked in the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>
-from Portsmouth a few days before we left
-London, and were now about due at Monte Carlo.
-My brother-in-law, the publisher, had made no
-difficulty to my sister’s joining the expedition,
-as to the true object of which he of course knew
-nothing; in fact, he was delighted she could get
-a holiday on the Riviera so cheaply. It was understood
-she was not to play, and not to spend
-more than £10 <span class='it'>en route</span>. I heard afterwards
-that Paternoster Row simply ran with his brag.
-“I’m a bachelor just at present. My wife’s
-yachting in the Mediterranean with some rich
-Americans. Very hospitable people; they wanted
-me to come, but really, just now—” etc., etc.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We had spent our first three days, not unprofitably,
-in prospecting the place. We reached
-Monte Carlo in the afternoon, and at once drove
-up to the hotel. Almost the first thing we saw
-was a large board over a little house on the hillside,
-close by the Crédit Lyonnais, with “<span class='it'>Avances
-sur bijoux</span>” on it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brentin chuckled. “Well, gentlemen,” he
-said, “we sha’n’t play the game quite so low
-down as that, eh? It will be either neck or
-nothing with us.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was five o’clock before we started to go down
-to the Casino. We set out in solemn silence,
-down the steep and glaring white road, past the
-“Victoria” and the chemist’s. At the head of
-the gaudy, painted gardens, that look like the supreme
-effort of a <span class='it'>modiste</span>, we came in full view
-of the rooms. There we paused, choked, the
-most sensitive of us, by our emotions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In front there was a long strip of gay flower-beds
-and white pebble paths, flanked by rows of
-California palms. To my excited fancy they were
-the planted feather brooms of <span class='it'>valets-de-place</span>—moral
-<span class='it'>valets-de-place</span> who had set out to sweep the
-place clean but had never had the courage to go
-further. To the right of us were the hotels—the
-“St. James’s” and the “De Paris”; to the left,
-the Casino gardens again, and the shallow pools
-where the frogs croak so dolorously at nightfall.
-They are, I believe (for I am a Pythagorean), the
-souls of ruined gamblers, still croaking out their
-<span class='it'>quatre premier</span>, their <span class='it'>dix-quinze</span>, their <span class='it'>douze dernier</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Peace, batrachians!” I cried to them one
-evening, in the exalted mood that now became
-common to me. “Be still, hoarse souls! push
-no more shadowy stakes upon a board of shadows
-with your webbed fingers. We are here to avenge
-ye!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then we went on down to the front of the
-rooms. There, unable to find a seat, we leaned
-against a lamp-post and gloated on the fantastic
-building that held our future possessions. On
-our left was the Café de Paris, overflowing with
-<span class='it'>consommateurs</span> at little tables under the awning;
-from the swirling whirlpool of noise made by the
-Hungarian band issued a maimed but recognizable
-English comic air. The sun was just setting
-in a matchless sky of Eton blue; the breeze had
-dropped, and the dingy Monaco flag over the
-Casino hung inert.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Soldiers!” whispered Teddy, giving me a
-frightened nudge.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They were, apparently, a couple of officers of
-the prince’s army, strolling round, smoking cheap
-cigars; they carried no side arms, and were of
-no particular physique. “Besides,” I said, “they
-are not allowed to enter the rooms. Don’t be so
-nervous, Teddy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let us go down on to the terrace,” murmured
-Brentin, “and view the place from the back. We
-must see how close we can get the yacht up!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So we went to the right, past the jingling omnibus
-crawling up from the Condamine, down the
-steps, and on to the terrace facing the sea. We
-passed the firemen Bailey Thompson told us we
-should find there, five or six of them; one at
-every twenty paces, in uniform, with an odd sort
-of gymnastic belt on. They were stationed at the
-back, too, and clearly formed a complete protection
-against any possible bomb-throwing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There are too many of those men,” observed
-Brentin, irritably. “We shall have to do something
-to draw them off on our great night or
-they’ll get in the way.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then we went and looked over the balustrade
-of the terrace. Below us ran the railway from
-Monaco; on the other side of the line, connected
-by an iron bridge with the Casino terrace, was
-the pigeon-shooting club-house and grounds.
-They formed a sort of bastion, jutting out into
-the sea; the pale, wintry grass was still marked
-with the traps of last year.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>That</span> won’t do!” Brentin said, decisively, after
-a few moments’ survey. “The run’s too far
-over that bridge and down across the grass. Besides,
-we should want rope ladders before we
-could get down the wall. Come, gentlemen, let
-us try this way.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We went to the extreme right of the terrace,
-and there, miraculously enough, we found at
-once the very thing we wanted. Mr. Brentin
-merely pointed at it in silence, keeping his attitude
-till we had all grasped the situation. It
-was a rickety gate at the head of an evidently
-unused flight of steps, leading down on to the
-railway line below. Beside it stood a weather-worn
-board with “<span class='it'>Défense d’entrée au public</span>” on
-it. It looked singularly out of place amid all that
-smart newness; but there it was, the very thing
-we were in search of.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The railway below ran six or eight feet above
-the sea, without any protecting parapet to speak
-of. Just at the angle where the pigeon-shooting
-ground jutted out there was a sort of broken
-space, where, for some reason (perhaps to allow
-the employés to descend), rocks were piled up
-from the shore. A boat could be there in waiting;
-the yacht could lie thirty yards off; if we
-had designed the place ourselves, we couldn’t
-have done it better.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Brentin slowly pointed a fateful finger
-down the steps, across the line, to the corner
-where the shore lay so close and handy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you observe it, gentlemen?” he whispered,
-awe-struck—“do you take it all in? There
-is no tide in the Mediterranean; the edge of the
-sea will always be there. Even if the night turns
-out as black as velvet we could find the boat
-there blindfold.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was a solemn moment, broken only by the
-jingle of omnibus bells. I felt like Wolfe when
-he first spied the broken path that led up the cliff
-face from the St. Lawrence to the Heights of
-Abraham.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By accident or design, Brentin gave Teddy
-Parsons’s white Homburg hat a tilt with his elbow;
-it tumbled off down the face of the terrace
-and fell out of sight on to the line.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s your chance, Teddy,” I said. “Run
-down the steps and fetch your hat. You can
-see if there’s another gate at the bottom where
-that bunch of cactus is.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Teddy came back breathless. “There’s no
-sort of obstruction,” he gasped. “It’s a clear run
-all the way. Only we shall have to be careful, if
-the night’s dark; some of the steps are broken.”
-Poor Teddy, how prophetic!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We entered the rooms for the first time after
-dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Readers who have been to Monte Carlo will remember
-that, before going into the hall, there is
-a room on the left, where half a dozen men sit
-writing cards of admission and drawing up lists
-of visitors. They make no trouble about it, they
-simply ask you your hotel and nationality—<span class='it'>Anglish,
-hein?</span>—and hand you over a pink card,
-good only for one day. Then you go to the right
-and leave your stick. Neither stick nor umbrella
-are allowed in the rooms. “Another point
-in our favor,” as I whispered to Brentin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Facing is the large hall; up and down stroll
-gamblers, come out for a breath of air or the
-whiff of a cigarette. Any one may use it, or the
-concert-room on the right, or the reading-rooms
-above, without a ticket; the ticket is needed
-only for the gambling. You can even cash a
-check or discount a bill there; for clerks are
-in attendance from the different banking-houses,
-within and without the principality, who will attend
-to your wants as a loser or take charge of
-your winnings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the left, heavy doors are constantly swinging.
-You can hear, if you listen, as they swing,
-the faint, enticing clink of the five-franc pieces
-within.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, my friends,” murmured Brentin, as we
-moved towards them, “support me!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He presented his pink card with a low bow to
-the two men guarding the entrance; we followed,
-and the next minute were palpitating in the stifling
-atmosphere of the last of the European public
-infernos.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p103'>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-MRS. WINGHAM AND TEDDY PARSONS—HE FOOLISHLY CONFIDES
-IN HER—I MAKE A SIMILAR MISTAKE
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Now</span> there was staying at our hotel, among
-other quiet people, a quiet old lady, whom, from
-her accent and the way she occasionally stumbled
-over an h, I took to be the widow of a well-to-do
-tradesman, a suburban <span class='it'>bon marché</span>, or stores.
-She played regularly every afternoon till dinner-time,
-dressed in black, with a veil down just below
-the tip of her nose, and worn black kid
-gloves, staking mostly on the <span class='it'>pair</span> or <span class='it'>impair</span> at
-roulette; and every evening she sat in the hotel
-over a bit of wood-fire, reading either <span class='it'>Le Petit
-Niçois</span> or an odd volume of <span class='it'>Sartor Resartus</span>,
-which, with some ancient torn <span class='it'>Graphics</span>, formed
-the library of the “Monopôle.” Her name I discovered
-afterwards to be Mrs. Wingham.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was only the third evening after our arrival
-that, going into the reading-room to write my
-daily loving letter to Lucy, there I found Mrs.
-Wingham and Teddy Parsons seated each side of
-the fire, talking away as confidentially as if they
-had known each other all their lives. Bob Hines,
-who had taken to gambling and couldn’t be kept
-away from the rooms, and Brentin had gone
-down to the Casino.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Few things I know more difficult than to write
-a letter and at the same time listen to a conversation,
-and I soon found myself writing down
-scraps of Teddy’s inflated talk, working it, in
-spite of myself, into my letter to Lucy—talk all
-the more inflated as I had come into the room
-quietly at his back, and he didn’t know I was
-there.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was telling the old lady all about his father,
-the colonel, and how he had fought through the
-Crimea without a scratch. Yes, he was in the
-army himself—at least, the auxiliary portion of
-it: the second line. He lived most of the year at
-Southport, when he wasn’t out with his regiment,
-or hunting and shooting with friends, and
-always came up to London for the Derby and
-stayed in Duke Street. He was very fond of a
-bit of racing, and, in fact, owned some race
-horses—or, rather, “a chaser”—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A what, sir?” asked the old woman, who
-was listening to him with her mouth open.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A chaser—a steeple-chaser, don’t you know—‘Tenderloin,’
-which was entered for the Grand
-National, and would be sure to be heavily backed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No, he didn’t care much about gambling; a
-man didn’t get a fair run for his money at Monte
-Carlo, the bank reserved too many odds in their
-own favor; to say nothing, as I knew, of his
-being kept very short of pocket-money by the
-colonel. And then he was actually fool enough
-to say, with a self-satisfied laugh, that he’d a
-notion the right way to treat the bank was to
-raid it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Raid it, sir?” cried the old woman.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, certainly, raid it; go into the rooms with
-a pistol and shout ‘Hands up, everybody!’ and
-carry off all the money on board a yacht, and be
-off, full speed.” Did Mrs. Wingham know if it
-had ever been tried?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From that to confiding our whole plan would
-have been only one step; but just at that moment
-in came Mrs. Sellars and Miss Marter, the only
-two other English ladies in the hotel, and Teddy
-and Mrs. Wingham fell to talking in whispers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Sellars, who was a stout, comfortable-looking
-person, with a large nose, a high color,
-and an expansive figure, generally attired in a
-blouse and a green velveteen skirt, was given to
-walking up and down the reading-room, moaning
-in theatrical agony over the disquieting news
-from South Africa. If she didn’t get a letter from
-her husband in the morning, she didn’t know
-what she should do; it was weeks since she had
-heard from him; something told her he was
-dead—and so on. Every distressed turn she
-took brought her nearer the ramshackle piano;
-so at last Miss Marter, mainly to stop her (for
-old maids don’t take much interest in other
-women’s husbands, alive or dead), with some asperity
-remarked, “Sing us something, dear; it
-will calm you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then she came to me and said, excitedly, “<span class='it'>Do</span>
-you mind if I bring down my little dog? I always
-ask, as people sometimes object. It is the
-dearest little dog, and always sits in my lap.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Teddy gave a violent start when he heard me
-answer, and knew he was detected. He got up,
-and, pretending to hum, immediately left the
-room. I didn’t like to follow at once, as I felt
-inclined; it would look as though Mrs. Sellars’s
-threatened singing drove me away. But the
-moment she finished I meant to go and give the
-wind-bag a good blowing-up, and meantime went
-on with my letter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Sellars hooted “ ’Tis I!” and “In the
-Gloaming,” and was beginning “Twickenham
-Ferry” when she broke down over the accompaniment,
-rose, and came to the fire. Miss
-Marter was sitting one side of it, stroking her
-torpid little terrier, and Mrs. Wingham (who
-was focussing <span class='it'>Sartor Resartus</span> through her glasses)
-on the other.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thank you, dear,” said Miss Marter. “I
-hope you feel calmer.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shall never be calmer,” Mrs. Sellars moaned,
-“till George is home again at my side.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, dear,” Miss Marter maliciously replied,
-looking down her long nose, “you know you insisted
-on his going.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So I left the two ladies to squabble as to who
-was mainly responsible for George’s being in
-South Africa in such ticklish times, and went in
-search of Teddy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was neither in the <span class='it'>fumoir</span> nor his bedroom,
-so down I went to the rooms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There I found Bob Hines punting on the middle
-dozen and the last six at roulette, with a pile
-of five-franc pieces before him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Those your winnings?” I whispered; to which
-he gave the not over-polite reply, “How can you
-be such a fool?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So I knew he was losing, and went off in search
-of Brentin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I found him in an excited circle watching a
-common-looking Englishman at the <span class='it'>trente-et-quarante</span>
-tables, who with great coolness was
-staking the maximum of twelve thousand francs,
-two at a time, one on <span class='it'>couleur</span> and one on black.
-In front of him the notes were piled so high that,
-being a little man, he had to press them down
-with his elbows before he could use his rake.
-Sometimes he won one bundle of notes, neatly
-pinned together and representing the maximum;
-sometimes both, as <span class='it'>couleur</span> and black turned out
-alike. Rarely he lost both. Others were staking,
-but mostly only paltry louis, or the broad, shining
-five-louis pieces one only sees at Monte Carlo.
-There was the usual church-like silence,
-broken only by the dry, sharp tones of the croupier’s
-harsh voice, “<span class='it'>Le jeu est fait!</span>” and then,
-sharper still, “<span class='it'>Rien ne va plus!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once the tension was broken by a titter of
-laughter, as a withered little Italian with a
-frightened air threw a five-franc piece down on
-the board and the croupier pushed it back. The
-poor devil apparently didn’t know that gold only
-may be staked at <span class='it'>trente-et-quarante</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I plucked Brentin by the sleeve and drew him
-to a side seat against the wall. “I hope that
-gentleman may be staking here this day week,”
-he chuckled. “Notes are easy to carry, and I
-myself have seen him win sixty thousand francs.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When he heard about Teddy he was furious.
-It was all I could do to prevent him from going
-off at once to the hotel and insisting on his leaving
-Monte Carlo by the next train.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I allow,” he said, “I was precipitate with
-Bailey Thompson, but at least we drew something
-out of him in the way of information. But to
-confide in a blathering old woman, who has nothing
-to do but eat and talk—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I went back to the hotel, only to find Teddy’s
-bedroom door locked, and to have my knocking
-greeted with a loud, sham snore. Mrs. Wingham
-I found still in the reading-room, alone, still focussing
-<span class='it'>Sartor Resartus</span> with her shocked and
-puzzled expression.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Your friend has just gone up to bed,” she
-remarked, “if you are looking for him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I thanked her, and, sitting the other side of the
-fire, proceeded to draw her out. She soon told
-me Teddy was so like a nephew of hers she had
-recently lost she had felt obliged to speak to
-him. She noticed him at once, she said, the first
-evening at dinner, and felt drawn to him immediately.
-What a fine, manly young feller he was,
-and how full of sperrit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yes, I said, he was, and often had very ingenious
-ideas—for instance, that notion of his to
-raid the tables I had overheard him discussing
-with her. But, then, there was all the difference
-in the world between having an idea and the
-carrying it out, wasn’t there? Merely as a matter
-of curiosity, what did she think of the notion—she,
-who doubtless knew the place so well?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The artful old woman—Bailey Thompson’s sister,
-if you please, and spy, as it afterwards turned
-out; hence his recommending us the “Monopôle,”
-so that she might keep an eye on us and report—the
-artful old woman looked puzzled, as though
-she were trying to remember what it was Teddy
-had said on the subject. Then she began to
-laugh. “Oh, I didn’t think much of that. Why,
-look at all the people there are about! Why,
-you’d need a ridgiment!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, will it be believed that I, who had just
-been so righteously indignant with Parsons for
-his talkative folly, did myself (feeling uncommonly
-piqued at her scornful tone) immediately
-set out to prove to her the thing was perfectly
-possible, and then and there explain in detail
-how it could all be successfully done, and with
-how small a force. I did, indeed, so true as I am
-sitting writing here now, in our flat in Victoria
-Street.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Wingham listened to me attentively,
-laughing to herself and saying, “Dear! dear!
-so it might!” as she rubbed her knuckled old
-hands between her black silk knees. When I had
-done, I felt so vexed with myself I could have
-bitten my tongue out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I rose, however, and, observing, “Of course, it
-is an idea and nothing else, and never will be
-realized,” bade her good-night and left the room,
-feeling uncommonly weak and foolish. She murmured,
-“Oh, of course!” as I closed the noisy
-glass door behind me and went up-stairs to bed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A few minutes later, remembering I had left
-my book on the table where I had been writing
-to Lucy, I went down-stairs again to fetch it.
-Mrs. Wingham was still there, sitting at the table
-writing a letter. The envelope, already written,
-was lying close by my book, and I couldn’t help
-reading it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was positively addressed to “Jas. B. Thompson,
-Esq., 3 Aldrich Road Villas, Brixton Rise,
-S. E. London.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I felt so faint I could scarcely get out of the
-room again and up the stairs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But such is our insane confidence, where we ourselves
-and our own doings are concerned—such, at
-any rate, was mine in my lucky star—that I really
-felt no difficulty in persuading myself the
-whole thing was merely a coincidence, and that
-the writing of the letter had nothing whatever
-to do with either my or Teddy Parsons’s divulgations;
-more especially as the Bailey, on which
-Thompson evidently piqued himself, was omitted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And I determined to say nothing about it to
-Brentin, partly because I didn’t care about being
-blackguarded by an American, and partly because
-I felt convinced it was all an accident,
-and nothing would come of it. Nor, in my
-generosity, did I do more to Teddy Parsons
-than temperately point out the folly he had
-been guilty of, and beg him to be more careful
-in future, which he very cheerfully promised,
-and for which magnanimity of mine he was,
-as I meant he should be, really uncommonly
-grateful.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p111'>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-ARRIVAL OF THE <span class='it'>AMARANTH</span>—ALL WELL ON BOARD—THEIR
-FIRST EXPERIENCE OF THE ROOMS
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>The</span> next afternoon, soon after four, the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>
-arrived in harbor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bob Hines was gambling, as usual, but Brentin,
-Teddy, and I went down to the Condamine to
-meet them. Teddy and Brentin had had their
-row out in the morning, to which I had listened
-in silence—with the indulgent air of a man who
-doesn’t want to add to the unpleasantness—and
-now were pretty good friends again. It was
-clearly understood, however, that no new acquaintances
-were to be made, male or female,
-and that henceforth any one of us seen talking
-to a stranger was immediately to be sent home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I fear the party from the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span> did not
-have a very good impression of Monte Carlo to begin
-with, for they landed in the Condamine, just
-where the town drain-pipes lie, and came ashore,
-each of them, with a handkerchief to the nose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So this is the Riviera!” snuffled my good
-sister. “I understood it was embosomed in
-flowers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They all looked very brown and well, and
-seemed in high spirits.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As for the yacht, she had behaved splendidly
-all through, and the conduct and polite attentions
-of Captain Evans and the crew had been
-above all praise. The only difficulty had been
-to explain away the shell and the three cannon;
-for which Forsyth had found the ingenious excuse
-that they were wanted for the Riff pirates,
-in case we determined to voyage along the African
-coast, where they are said to abound and
-will sometimes attack a yacht.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We all strolled up the hill together, and, such
-were their spirits, nothing would content the
-new arrivals but an immediate visit to the rooms.
-Miss Rybot, especially, was as cheerful as a
-blackbird in April; she had come there to gamble,
-she said, and gamble she would at once.
-She and Masters were evidently on the best of
-terms, and even the captious Brentin was pleased
-with what people who write books call her “infectious
-gayety.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You have your own little schemes,” she
-cried, “and I have mine. I am going to win
-fifty pounds to pay my debts with, and then I
-am going home, whether you have finished or
-not. And if I haven’t finished, you will all have
-to leave me here.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They were soon provided with their pink admission-cards
-(ours had that morning, after the
-usual pretended scrutiny and demur, been exchanged
-for white monthly ones), and, after leaving
-their cloaks, passed through the swing-doors
-into the rooms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was just that impressive hour—the only
-one, I think, at Monte Carlo—when the Casino
-footmen, in their ill-fitting liveries, zigzagged
-with faded braid, bring in the yellow oil-lamps
-with hanging green shades, and sling them from
-the long brass chains over the tables. The rest
-of the rooms lie in twilight, before the electric
-light is turned up. Dim figures sweep noiselessly
-as spectres over the dull-shining parquet
-floor, and, like a spear, I have seen the last long
-ray of southern sunshine strike in and touch
-the ghastly hollow cheek of some old woman
-fingering her coins, lifeless and mechanical as
-Charon fingering his passage-money for the
-dead; but, just over the tables, the yellow light
-from the lamp falls brilliant, yet softly, brightly
-illuminating the gamblers’ hands and some few
-of their faces, throwing the white numbers on
-the rich green cloth as strongly into relief as
-though newly sewn on there of tape.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Faites votre jeu, messieurs!</span>” croaks the
-croupier, in his dry, toneless voice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With deft fingers he spins the active, rattling
-little ball.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Le jeu est fait!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The white ball begins to tire, drops out of its
-circuit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Rien ne va plus!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A few seconds of leaping indecision and restlessness,
-before the ball falls finally into a number
-and remains there, while the board still
-spins.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Trente-six!—Rouge, pair et manque!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The croupiers’ rakes are busy, pulling in the
-money lost; the money won is thrown with dull,
-heavy thuds and clinks on to the table. In a
-few moments it is begun all over again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Faites votre jeu, messieurs!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So this is Monte Carlo!” whispered my sister,
-in the proper, hushed tones, as though asking
-me for something to put in the collection.
-“My one objection is, no one looks in the least
-haggard or anxious. I understood I should see
-such terrible faces, and they all look as bored
-as people at an ordinary London dinner-party.
-Take me round.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brentin came with us, and we visited each of
-the busy roulette-tables in turn. Monte Carlo
-was very full, and round some of the tables the
-crowd was so deep it was impossible to get near
-enough to look, much less to play. But between
-the tables there were large vacant spaces of dull-shining,
-greasy parquet; the tables looked like
-populous places on the map, and the flooring
-like open country. Here and there stood the
-footmen, straight out of an old Adelphi melodrama;
-some of them carried trays and glasses
-of water, and some gave you cards to mark the
-winning numbers and the colors.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It is not quite so splendid and gay as I imagined,”
-my sister observed. “In fact, it’s all
-rather dim and dingy. Do you know it reminds
-me of the Pavilion at Brighton more than anything
-else. And how common some of the people
-are! Isn’t that your friend, Mr. Hines?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bob Hines was sitting in rather a melancholy
-heap, with a pile of five-franc pieces in front of
-him, and a card on which he was morosely writing
-the numbers as they came up.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let’s ask him how he’s doing?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Never speak to a gambler,” I whispered;
-“it’s considered unlucky.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Judging from his expression, he will be glad
-to get something back in your raid! And why
-seat himself between those two terrible old
-women?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They look,” Brentin murmured, “like representations
-of friend Zola’s the fat and the lean.
-Sakes alive! they’d make the fortune of a dime
-museum. Those women are freaks, ma’am,
-freaks.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hines was sitting between two ladies; one,
-with a petulant face of old childishness, was
-enormously stout. Her eyebrows were densely
-blackened, her pendulous cheeks as dusty with
-powder as the Mentone road. She was gorgeously
-overdressed; her broad bosom, fluid as of
-arrested molten tallow, was hung with colored
-jewels, like a <span class='it'>bambino</span>. With huge gloved hands
-and arms she was wielding a rake, whereof poor
-Bob had occasionally the end in his face. Beside
-her, on the green cloth, lay a withered
-bunch of roses, dead of her large, cruel grasp.
-At her back stood her husband, a German Jew
-financier, who couldn’t keep his pince-nez on.
-Continually he smoothed his thin hair and tried
-to get her away, grumbling and moving from leg
-to leg; for hours he would stand behind her
-chair, supplying her with money, for she nearly
-always lost. Occasionally she grabbed other people’s
-stakes, or they grabbed hers. Then she
-was sublime in her horrible ill-humor; half rising,
-with her great arms resting on the table, she
-shouted at the croupiers to be paid, in harsh,
-rattling, fish-fag tones. The sunken corners of
-her small mouth were drawn upward; the deep-set
-eyes worked in dull fury; you saw short,
-white teeth that once had smiled in a pretty
-Watteau face. Now the body was old and torpid
-and swollen; but the rabbit intelligence was still
-undeveloped, except in the direction of its rapacity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Poor Bob Hines! He was indeed badly placed!
-On his other side sat a lath-and-plaster widow in
-the extensive mourning of a Jay’s advertisement.
-Her face was yellow and damaged as a broken old
-fresco at Florence; thin, oblong, brittle, only the
-semi-circular, blackened eyebrows seemed alive.
-The dyed, pallid hair looked dead as a Lowther
-Arcade doll’s; dead were her teeth, her long,
-thin, griffin hands with curved nails. Decomposition,
-even by an emotion, was somehow palpably
-arrested; perhaps she was frozen by the
-bitter chill of fatal zero. Horrible, old, crape-swathed
-mummy, one would have said she had
-lost even her husband at play. Who could ever
-have been found to love her? At whom had she
-ever smiled? at what had she ever laughed or
-wept? Bride of Frankenstein’s monster, she
-worked her muck-rake with the small, dry, galvanized
-gestures of an Edison invention. Poor
-Bob Hines! It sickened me to think these
-women, and others perhaps worse, were of the
-same sisterhood with Lucy. What a day when
-we should sweep them all out before us, as the
-fresh autumn wind sweeps the withered leaves
-across the walks of Kensington Gardens!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So this is Monte Carlo!” murmured my sister
-again. “It stifles me! Take me out to the Café
-de Paris and give me some tea.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As she took my arm and we went down the
-steps, “Easier place, however, to raid,” she remarked,
-“I never saw. As for the morality of
-it, I was a little doubtful at first, but now—”</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p118'>CHAPTER XV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-INFLUENCE OF CLIMATE ON ADVENTURE—UNEXPECTED
-ARRIVAL OF LUCY—HER REVELATIONS—DANGER
-AHEAD
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>So</span> a few days passed, and, pleasantly idle
-though it all was, it began to be time for us to
-think seriously of our purport in being at Monte
-Carlo at all. Our party had very easily fallen
-into the ways of the place, and appeared to be
-enjoying themselves, each in their own fashion,
-amazingly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Here’s Teddy’s got a bicycle,” as I said to
-Brentin, “and is always over at Mentone with
-friends. Bob Hines does nothing but gamble,
-and is scarcely ever with us, even at meal-times.
-He lives on sandwiches and hot <span class='it'>grog Américaine</span>
-at the Café de Paris. Forsyth struts about in
-fancy suits, making eyes at the ladies, and Masters
-is all day at the back of Miss Rybot’s chair,
-supplying her with fresh funds and taking charge
-of her winnings.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>C’est magnifique</span>,” yawned Brentin, “<span class='it'>mais ce
-n’est pas la guerre</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s worse,” I said; “it’s Capua, simply, and
-must be put a stop to.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I know if I were here a fortnight longer,”
-yawned my sister, “with nothing to do, I should
-desert my husband and child and be off into Italy
-along the Corniche with white mice.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Turn pifferari; exactly,” said Brentin.
-“Therefore, sir, we must move in this business,
-and the sooner the better, or the golden
-opportunity will slip by us, never to return.
-And that’s all there is to it. We will summon
-a council of war this evening on board the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>
-and fix the day finally.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, all I ask is,” said my sister, “that in
-case of failure Miss Rybot and I are afforded every
-opportunity of escape. I don’t want to give
-those Medworth Square people the chance of coming
-and crowing over me in a French prison. Besides,
-it wouldn’t do Frank’s business any good,
-if I were caught.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, just think what a book you could
-make of it,” I murmured—“<span class='it'>Penal Servitude for
-Life; by a Lady</span>. Rivers would make his fortune.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What would have been, after all, the end of our
-adventure, whether the sunshine might not have
-softened us into finally abandoning the enterprise
-altogether—to my lasting shame and grief!—I
-cannot take upon myself to say. All I know for
-certain is, that if our hands had not been, in a
-measure, forced—if circumstances had not made
-it rather more dangerous for us to go back
-than to go on—our party would at any rate have
-needed an amount of whipping into line which
-would as likely as not have driven them into restive
-retirement, instead of the somewhat alarmed
-advance which was ultimately forced on us and
-turned out so entirely successful.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And as it is my particular pride to think I owe
-the undertaking, in the first place, to my love for
-Lucy, so it is my joy to reflect how the final
-carrying of it out was due to her affection for
-me, that drove her to journey—quite unused
-to foreign parts as she was—right across Europe,
-alone, and give me timely warning of the
-dastardly scheme on foot for our capture and
-ruin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was the very afternoon following the morning
-of our brief conversation on the terrace that
-I went back early to the hotel, with some natural
-feelings of depression and irritation at the growing
-callous inertia of our party.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was going up to my room, when from the
-reading-room I heard the sound of the piano.
-I stopped in some amazement, for there was being
-played an air I never heard any one but Lucy
-play. It was an old Venetian piece of church
-music (by Gordigiani, if I remember right), and I
-had never heard it anywhere but at “The French
-Horn,” on the rather damaged old cottage piano
-in the little room behind the bar.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I stole down-stairs again, and, my heart beating,
-opened the glass door noiselessly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was Lucy! and the next moment, with a
-little scream, she was in my arms. I took her to
-the sofa; for some moments she was so agitated
-she couldn’t speak, nor could I, believing, indeed,
-it was a ghost, till I felt the soft pressure
-of her arms and the warmth of her cheek as her
-head lay on my shoulder, while she trembled and
-sobbed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t be frightened,” I murmured. “It’s
-really I. Now, don’t cry; be calm and tell me
-all about it. We are both safe; we love each
-other. Nothing else in the world matters.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last, in broken tones and at first with many
-tears, she told me the whole story. I listened as
-though I were in a dream, and my bones stiffened
-with anger and apprehension.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The gist of it was briefly this: that one day
-Mr. Crage had come down to “The French
-Horn” and had an interview with her father in
-the bar-parlor. He had come to put an end to
-Mr. Thatcher’s tenancy, a yearly one, and turn
-him out of the inn, unless, as he suggested, exactly
-like a villain on the stage, Lucy would,
-for her father’s sake, engage to marry him, in
-which case he might remain, and at a reduced
-rent. Thatcher, who, after all, is a gentleman,
-declared the idea preposterous, more particularly
-as his daughter was already engaged, with his full
-consent and approbation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, ah!” snarled Crage—“to that young cockney
-who was down here at Christmas. Suppose
-you call her in, however, and let her speak for
-herself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whereupon Lucy was sent for and told of
-Crage’s iniquitous proposal, of which Thatcher
-very properly urged her not to think, but to refuse
-there and then.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, ah!” Crage had grinned. “The young
-cockney has enough for you all and won’t grudge
-it, I dare say. He’s gone to Monte Carlo, ain’t
-he?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yes, said Lucy, Mr. Blacker had, and had
-promised her not to gamble.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Gamble or not,” sneered Crage, “I know
-what he is up to. The police are already on his
-track. Why, I shouldn’t be the least surprised
-to hear he’s already in their hands, and condemned
-to penal servitude for life.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On hearing that, poor Lucy said she thought
-she should have dropped on the floor, like water.
-But she has the courage of her race, and, telling
-the old man in so many words he was mad, turned
-to leave the room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, it’s an odd thing that the old wretch,
-though he never minded being called a liar, never
-could bear any reflection on his sanity—it was
-the fusty remains, I suppose, of his old professional
-Clement’s Inn pride; so he lost his temper
-at once, and with many shrieks and gesticulations
-told them the whole story.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That—as I have written—Bailey Thompson was
-a detective, frequently in the “Victoria” smoking-room
-in the course of his duty; and that
-Brentin had actually confided in him—as we
-know—all that we were going to do, that he
-was an old friend of Crage’s, dating from the
-Clement’s Inn days, and on Christmas night had
-divulged the whole scheme just as he had received
-it from us, telling him with much glee, being a
-season of jollity and good-will, how he was going
-to follow us to Monte Carlo and make every disposition
-to catch us in the act. Crage added
-that Bailey Thompson had rather doubted at
-first whether we weren’t humbugging him; but
-having since heard from his sister, Mrs. Wingham,
-that she believed we were really in earnest,
-was already somewhere on his way out to superintend
-our capture in person.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I didn’t know what to do,” cried Lucy, piteously;
-“I could only laugh in his face and tell
-him he was the victim of a practical joke.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Practical joke!” Crage had screamed; “you
-wait till they’re all in prison; perhaps they’ll call
-that a practical joke, too. Now, look here,
-Thatcher, you’re a sensible man; you break off
-this engagement before the scandal overtakes
-you all, and I’ll treat you and your daughter
-handsomely. You shall stay on in the inn, or
-not, just as you please, and the day we’re married
-I’ll settle Wharton on dear Lucy here. I sha’n’t
-live so very much longer, I dare say,” he whined—“I’m
-eighty-two next month—and then she can
-marry the young cockney, if she wants to, when
-he’s done his time. Don’t decide now; send me
-up a note in the course of the next few days.
-Hang it! I won’t be hard on you; I’ll give you
-both a fortnight.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And with that and no more the wicked old
-man had stumped out of the bar parlor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lucy’s mind was soon made up. Notwithstanding
-her father’s expostulations, she had determined
-to come after me and learn the truth
-for herself; and as he couldn’t come with her, to
-come alone. She hadn’t written, for fear of my
-telegraphing she was not to start. And here she
-was, to be told the truth, to be reassured, to be
-made happy once more; if possible, to take me
-home with her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, it’s not true, Vincent, dearest!” she murmured.
-“It’s all a fable, isn’t it? You’re not
-even dreaming of doing anything so dangerous
-and foolish?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, deep and true as is my affection for Lucy,
-I should have been quite unworthy of her if I
-had allowed myself to be turned from so deeply
-matured and worthy a purpose as ours merely by
-her tears.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The more I had seen of Monte Carlo, the more
-sincerely was I convinced of its worthlessness,
-and the dignity of a serious effort to put a stop to
-it. For it is simply, as I have written, a <span class='it'>cocotte’s</span>
-paradise and nothing more; and if, by any effort
-of mine, I could close it, I felt I should be rendering
-a service to humanity only second to Wilberforce
-and the Slave Trade. What a glorious
-moment if only I could live to see a large board
-stuck out of the Casino windows with <span class='it'>À Vendre</span>
-on it, to say nothing of the boards taken in from
-outside the London hospitals and the closed
-wards in working order again, full of sufferers!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So I calmed dear Lucy and told her how glad
-I was to see her; that above all things she must
-trust me and believe what I was doing and going
-to do was for the best and would turn out not
-unworthy of nor unserviceable to her in the
-long-run; more especially, if only it were, as we
-had every reason to believe it would be, successful.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After some further talk, she promised to say
-no more and to trust me entirely, both now and
-always, begging me only to assure her I was not
-angry, and that what she had done in coming
-was really for my benefit and welfare. I told her
-truly she had rendered me the greatest possible
-service, and that I loved her if possible more
-deeply for this new proof of her devotion than
-before. Then I telegraphed to her father of her
-safety, got her something to eat, and sent her off
-early to bed after her long journey (she had come
-second-class, poor child, and had stopped once
-at least at every station, and twice at some), and
-at nine o’clock we went down to the Condamine
-to go on board the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span> for our council of
-war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the way down I told Brentin the reason of
-Lucy’s sudden visit, and the new danger from
-Bailey Thompson, who by this time was clearly
-on his way after us, if indeed he hadn’t already
-arrived. At the same time, I candidly confessed
-to my indiscretion with Mrs. Wingham, and the
-letter I had seen her writing to her brother. We
-found no difficulty in agreeing we both had behaved
-like arrant fools, and might very fairly be
-pictured as standing on the romantic, but uncomfortable,
-edge of a precipice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But we must go on, sir,” said Brentin, with
-decision. “It will never do to back out now,
-after coming so far and spending so much money.
-We must never allow this shallow detective trash
-to frighten us; we must meet him in a friendly
-spirit, and find some means to dump him where
-he may be both remote and harmless. The Balearic
-Isles, for choice.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What about the band of brothers?” I asked.
-“How will they regard these fresh revelations?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s the difficulty,” replied Brentin,
-thoughtfully. “We must exercise care, sir, or
-they’ll be scattering off home like Virginia wheat-ears.”</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p127'>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-COUNCIL OF WAR—CAPTAIN EVANS’S DECISION—I GO TO
-THE ROOMS AND CONFIDE IN MY SISTER
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>When</span> the band of brothers in the saloon on
-board the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span> heard all, or rather so much
-as we thought fit delicately to tell them, they
-turned—collectively and individually—pale.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then there’s an end of it,” chattered Teddy.
-“It was a fool’s journey from the beginning, and
-the sooner we all go home again the better.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The sooner you go, sir,” retorted Brentin,
-“the easier we shall all breathe. Is there any
-other palpitating gentleman desires to climb
-down?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“One moment, first,” said Hines; “before we
-decide to break up, can’t we consider whether
-there may not be a way of either stopping your
-friend Bailey Thompson <span class='it'>en route</span>, or at least rendering
-him powerless when he arrives? The
-fact is,” he diffidently continued, “I have lost a
-good deal of money here, and don’t altogether
-care about leaving it without an effort of some
-kind to get it back, to say nothing of the lark
-of the thing, which I take it has been one of its
-chief recommendations from the first.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To say nothing, too, of the fact—as I knew—that
-before leaving Folkestone he had sent out a
-circular to the parents of his boys to announce
-the addition of a swimming-bath and a gymnasium
-to his establishment, the non-erection of
-which would surely cause him to look more foolish
-than a schoolmaster cares about. And what
-would the boys say who had cheered him loudly
-at the end of last term, when, in a neat speech,
-he had announced his generous intention?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Spoken like ay white man!” cried Brentin.
-“Why, whoever supposed that in an enterprise
-of this magnitude there would not arise danger
-and difficulties? They are only just beginning,
-gentlemen; if any of you, therefore, still desire
-to shirk, he has only to say the word. Conveyance
-to the shore is immediately at his service;
-he can this moment go and pack his grip and be
-way off home. We shall be well rid of him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a pause, and then Forsyth said:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aren’t you going, Parsons?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Teddy lighted a cigarette nervously and replied:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, dash it all, let’s hear what’s proposed
-first.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, sir!” shouted Brentin, thumping the
-table. “You go or you stay, one or the other;
-we will have no ha-alf measures. The time for
-them has elapsed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Very well,” stammered the unhappy Parsons,
-“if you are all going to stay, of course I must
-stay too. I thought the affair was all over, that’s
-why I spoke. I wasn’t thinking, you know, of
-deserting my pals.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bravo!” cried Hines, sardonically. “You
-ain’t exactly a hero, Parsons, but I dare say you’ll
-do very well.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There is just one thing I should like to point
-out,” Arthur Masters observed, “before we go
-any further. The affair is assuming a somewhat
-grave aspect, and it is of course possible that,
-in spite of all precautions, we may, after all, be
-captured, either on shore or, later, on board the
-yacht.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hear! Hear!” Teddy murmured.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now, is it fair to get Captain Evans and the
-crew into difficulties without letting them know
-what we are going to do, and giving them the
-chance of refusing to join us first?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, sir,” objected Brentin, “we always
-meant to tell him, but not until the last moment,
-when we should have claimed their assistance,
-if only in removing the boodle. You see,
-gentlemen, the British sailor is a fine fellow, but
-he is apt to tank-up and get full—full as ay goat,
-gentlemen—and in that condition he is confiding.
-Now we have unfortunately been confiding when
-dry, but the British sailor—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We must risk that,” Masters replied. “And,
-after all, once they are told and have consented,
-they can be refused permission to go on shore
-again before we start.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” said Forsyth, “why not have Captain
-Evans in and tell him now; then he can
-use his discretion as to telling the crew at all till
-the last moment, or selecting the most trustworthy
-and sober of them for his confidence at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So we decided to send for Captain Evans before
-going any further.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When he stepped into the saloon, smart and
-sailor-like, peaked cap in hand, Brentin begged
-him to be seated, and gave him one of his longest
-and blackest cigars.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, “Captain Evans,” he said, “we have
-sent for you so that in case of this affair of ours
-going wrong you may not have any cause of complaint
-against us.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aye, aye, sir!” said the captain, “and what
-affair may that be?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He listened with the deepest attention and
-in complete silence while our scheme was unfolded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, gentlemen,” he said, when Brentin
-had finished, “I will be perfectly frank with
-you. Your scheme is your own, and you know
-best how far it is likely to fail or to succeed.
-But if it fails and we are all caught, I shall never
-be able to persuade the authorities I was an innocent
-party, and there will be an end to any
-future employment. I have a wife and a fine
-little boy to think of, gentlemen; how am I
-going to support them?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Your objection is perfectly fair, captain,”
-said Brentin. “My answer to it is, that if you
-get into trouble, I will personally undertake to
-make you an allowance of £150 per annum for
-the period dooring which you remain out of a
-berth. In the case of success, and the boodle
-being considerable, you must trust us to make
-you such a present or <span class='it'>solatium</span> as shall in my
-opinion repay you for any risks you may have
-run. How will that do?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That will do, gentlemen, thank you,” the
-captain replied. “And what about the crew?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We shall be glad if you will select six of the
-most elegant of your men, whose assistance will
-be needed in the rooms on the night. Clothes will
-be provided for them, and their duties will be
-explained in good time. As for the others, if
-they are to be told, they must not be allowed on
-shore. To-day is Wednesday; we propose to
-start Friday. Till Friday they must be confined
-on board.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“With the exception of the cook, gentlemen,”
-urged the captain. “He has to go on shore
-marketing.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then don’t tell the cook. Now, do we
-understand each other?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aye, aye, sir!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“One question, captain,” said Brentin, as he
-rose. “The French corvette has left the harbor,
-I understand?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, sir, she sailed to Villefranche yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span>, what of her?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’s away over at San Remo, sir, and returns
-some time to-night or to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thank you, Captain Evans; that will do.
-Good-evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My friends,” he said, as the captain closed
-the door, “this is going to cost a lot of money;
-let us hope we shall all come out right
-side up.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And now, what about Bailey Thompson?”
-Bob Hines asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Our plan is obvious,” Brentin replied. “I
-must board the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span> first thing in the morning,
-reintrodooce myself to Van Ginkel, confide
-in him and beg him to take Thompson on board
-for us, and be off with him kindly down the
-coast. East or west, he can dump him where
-he pleases, so long as he does dump him somewhere
-and leave him there like dirt. How does
-that strike you, gentlemen?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If only he can be got to go!” I answered;
-“and Mrs. Wingham? You must remember it
-was he who advised us to go to the Monopôle,
-no doubt giving the old lady instructions to
-keep an eye on us and report.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” said Brentin, “Mr. Parsons here is
-her friend. He must manage to let her know
-we don’t start operations till Saturday. That
-will put her off the scent. And now, gentlemen,
-let us discuss details and positions.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I left them to their discussion and went on
-shore to find my sister and Miss Rybot, who
-were at the rooms. My sister knew nothing
-whatever about Lucy—still less of her being at
-Monte Carlo. I had to make a clean breast of
-it all, and get her to take Lucy on board the yacht
-in the morning, so as to be out of Bailey Thompson’s
-way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I found them without much difficulty, full as
-the rooms were. Miss Rybot was seated, playing
-roulette, rather unsuccessfully, if I might judge
-from her ill-humored expression. Facing her,
-standing staring at her pathetically, with a soft
-hat crushed under his arm, was a tall, blond,
-sentimental-looking young German.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Tell that man to go away, please,” she said
-to me, crossly. “He’s been standing there staring
-at me the last half-hour, and he brings me
-bad luck. Tell him I hate the sight of him.
-Tell him to go away at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I explained that I was scarcely sufficient master
-of German for all that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Keep my place, please,” she said, imperiously,
-and went round to the young man, who received
-her with a fascinating smile.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Vous comprenez le Français?</span>” I heard her
-say to him, folding her arms and looking him
-resolutely full in the face.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Oui, mademoiselle.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Alors, allez-vous-en, sivooplay</span>,” she went on;
-“<span class='it'>je n’aime pas qu’un homme me regarde comme
-ça. Vous me portez de la guigne. Allez-vous-en,
-ou j’appelle les valets. C’est inouï! Allez-vous-en!
-Vous avez une de ces figures qui porte de la
-guigne toujours. Entendez-vous? toujours!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With that, entirely unconcerned, she resumed
-her seat, while the young German, who had hitherto
-been under the impression he had made a
-conquest, strolled off somewhat alarmed to another
-table.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My sister I found in the farther rooms watching
-the <span class='it'>trente-et-quarante</span>. “Hullo, Vincent!”
-she said. “Council over? Dear me, I wish I
-hadn’t promised Frank not to play; my fingers
-are simply tingling. However, I’ve been playing
-in imagination and lost 40,000 francs, so perhaps
-it’s just as well.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I drew her to a side seat and soon told her all
-about Lucy and her arrival, softening down the
-Bailey Thompson part for fear of alarming her
-unduly; giving other reasons for the dear girl’s
-sudden descent on us, all more or less true.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My good sister was as sympathetic as usual,
-only she entreated me to be sure I was really serious
-and in earnest this time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You know, Vincent,” she said, “you have so
-often come moaning to me about young ladies,
-and I have so often asked them to tea and taken
-them to dances for you, and nothing whatever
-has come of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But that hasn’t been my fault,” I answered.
-“I have simply got tired of them, that’s all.
-This time I am really in earnest.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So you always were!” she laughed, “up to a
-certain point. Why, you’re a sort of a young
-lady-taster.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” I replied, “how are you to know
-what sort of cheese you like unless you taste
-several?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Rather hard on the cheese, isn’t it? The process
-of tasting is apt to leave a mark.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, not in the hands of an adroit and respectable
-cheesemonger’s assistant.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Vincent,” said my sister, severely, “don’t be
-cynical, or I’ll do nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All the same, she knew what I said was true.
-Men would, I believe, always be faithful if only
-they could feel there was anything really to be
-faithful to. But they meet an angel at an evening
-party, and then, when they go to call, they
-find the angel fled and the most ordinary young
-person in her place; one scarcely capable of inspiring
-a school-boy in the fifth form to the mediocre
-height of the most ordinary verse-power.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But with Lucy! Sympathetic readers don’t, I
-am sure, look for protestations from me where
-she’s concerned. At least, not now.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The end of our talk was, it was arranged between
-us Lucy should go on board the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>
-in the morning and there remain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And the next morning there she was comfortably
-installed, and already looking forward to the
-Friday evening, when she was told we were going
-to make a move out of harbor, and probably go
-home by way of the Italian coast, and possibly
-by rail from Venice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Everything else was kept from her carefully,
-which is, I think, the worst of an adventure of
-this kind; one is driven to subterfuge even with
-those one loves best.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p136'>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-ENTER MR. BAILEY THOMPSON—VAN GINKEL STANDS BY
-US—WE SHOW THOMPSON ROUND AND EXPLAIN DETAILS—TEDDY
-PARSONS’S ALARM
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>The</span> Bailey Thompson problem confronted us
-<span class='it'>in propriâ personâ</span> that very same afternoon, the
-Thursday, at about half-past four, when, as we
-were some of us sitting outside the Café de Paris
-at tea, I saw him strolling round the central
-flower-beds in front of the rooms. He wore one
-of the new soft straw hats, a black frock-coat,
-tan shoes, and the invariable dog-skin gloves,
-and over his arm he carried a plaid shawl. In
-short, he looked like what he was, Scotland Yard
-<span class='it'>en voyage</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I pointed him out to Brentin, who immediately
-jumped up, crossed the road, and greeted him
-with effusion. Then he brought him over and introduced
-him to our party, among whom, luckily
-enough, was seated Mr. Van Ginkel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now I don’t want to say anything uncivil in
-print about a gentleman who rendered us later a
-service so undeniable, and, indeed, priceless; but
-I cannot help observing that Van Ginkel, on the
-whole, was one of the dreariest personalities I
-ever came in touch with.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was about Brentin’s age, fifty-four or so,
-but he appeared years older; his hair and beard
-were almost white, and his face was so lined, the
-flesh appeared folded, almost like linen. He had
-some digestive troubles that kept him to a milk
-diet, and he would sit in entire silence looking
-straight ahead of him, searching, as it were, for
-the point of time when he should be able to eat
-meat once more.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brentin had boarded the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span> early that
-morning on its return, and given a full account
-of our scheme and its difficulties. Van Ginkel
-had listened in complete silence; and when
-Brentin had told him of Bailey Thompson, and
-our earnest desire to get him out of the way,
-ending by asking him to be so friendly as to take
-him on board and keep him there till we had
-finished, Van Ginkel had just remarked, “Why,
-certainly!” and relapsed into silence again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He has very much altered,” Brentin had
-whispered, after presenting me; when Van Ginkel
-shook me by the hand, said “Mr. Vincent
-Blacker,” in the American manner, and was
-further entirely dumb. “He was the liveliest
-freshman of my class and the terror of the Boston
-young ladies, especially when he was full. As,
-of course, you know from his name, he is one of
-the oldest families of Noo York State.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” I replied, “and he looks it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bailey Thompson sat with us for some little
-time outside the “Café de Paris,” and made
-himself uncommonly agreeable, according to his
-Scotland Yard lights. He told us, the hypocrite,
-he usually came to Monte Carlo at this time of
-the year, and usually stayed at the “Monte
-Carlo Hotel,” just where the road begins to descend
-to the Condamine, once Madame Blanc’s
-villa.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Where were we? Oh! some of us were at the
-“Monopôle” and some on board the yacht.
-Really? Why, the “Monopôle” was the hotel
-he had recommended us, wasn’t it? He hoped
-we found it fairly quiet and comfortable, and
-not too dear, did the arch-hypocrite!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When my sister rose to go back to the rooms
-and look after Miss Rybot, Van Ginkel roused
-himself to ask her to lunch with him the next
-day, Friday, on board the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span>, and go for
-a sail afterwards to Bordighera. He managed
-the affair like an artist, for he didn’t immediately
-include Bailey Thompson in the invitation,
-as though he knew too little of him just for the
-present. It was not till later, as we strolled down
-to the Condamine—he, Thompson, Brentin, and
-I—that he asked us to come on board the yacht
-and see over it, and not till finally as we were
-leaving that (as though reminding himself he
-must not be impolite) he begged the detective to
-be of the party, if he had no other engagement
-of the kind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thompson—simple soul!—was enchanted to
-accept, and, as we went back on shore in the boat,
-went off into raptures at the beauty of the yacht
-and the politeness of the owner in asking him
-on so short an acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we three strolled up the hill, Brentin, with
-the most natural air of trust, at once launched
-out on the subject of our plan.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, here we are, sir, you see,” he said;
-“everything is in train. We approach the
-hour.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Here am I, too,” smiled the cool little man.
-“I told you I should most likely be over.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We are real glad to see you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And you really mean it, now you’re on the
-spot and can measure some of the difficulties
-for yourselves?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So much so that we have decided for Saturday
-night,” was Brentin’s light and untruthful
-reply. “We have observed the rooms are at
-their fullest then.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where are the rest of your party—the other
-gentlemen I saw at ‘The French Horn?’ ”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mr. Hines is gambling, having unfortunately
-developed tastes in that direction. Mr. Masters
-is in attendance on a lady friend—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The ladies of your party know nothing of
-your intentions, I presume?” said Thompson.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nothing, sir; nothing. For them it is a
-mere party of pleasure all the time. Then Mr.
-Forsyth is playing that fool-game, tennis, with
-his late colonel, behind the “Hôtel de Paris,”
-and Mr. Parsons is somewhere way off on the
-Mentone Road, choking himself with dust on ay
-loaned bicycle.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s the six of you. But now you have
-seen everything, do you really think six will be
-enough?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sir,” said Brentin, “six stalwarts of our crew
-have been confided in. They will be furnished
-with linen bags to collect the boodle, directly the
-tables are cleared of the croupiers and gamblers
-by us; in fact, acting on your kind hint, longshore
-suits have been provided them in which
-they have already rehearsed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not in the rooms?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sir, they were there mid-day just before you
-came, and their behavior was as scroopulous as
-the late Lord Nelson’s.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Was there any difficulty made about their
-cards?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, none whatever. They went in in pairs,
-and each told a different lie: one pair were staying
-at the ‘Metropôle,’ another at the ‘de Paris,’
-and another at the ‘S. James.’ They were well
-coached and they are brainy fellows. They were
-informed they must behave like ornaments of
-high-toned society, and not expectorate on the
-floor; and they paraded in couples, ejaculating
-<span class='it'>Haw, demmy!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Really!” murmured Bailey Thompson, “these
-people deserve to be raided. And that is your
-yacht, I suppose, lying off there—the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>,
-isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That is the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>, sir. At 9.30 to-morrow—I
-should say Saturday!—<span class='it'>Saturday</span> night,
-she will have orders to get as close up to the
-shore as quickly as she can. If you will step
-this way, sir, down on to the terrace here, we will
-have pleasure in showing you the spot marked
-out by Nature and Providence for our retreat.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When we showed him the board with <span class='it'>défense
-d’entrée au public</span> on it, the steps leading down
-on to the railway line, the broken piece of embankment,
-so few feet above the shore, Bailey
-Thompson gave a low whistle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Lord! how simple it is,” he murmured.
-“Now you’d think people would take better care
-than that of property of such enormous value,
-wouldn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sir,” said Mr. Brentin, with magisterial emphasis,
-“in the simplicity of the idea lies its
-grandeur. It is significant of poor human nature
-to make difficulties for themselves; they neglect
-what lies at their feet, ready to be carted away
-for the trouble. Everybody has heard of the
-man who stood on your London Bridge offering
-sovereigns for a penny apiece, and doing no trade
-in them; while we all know the Boer children
-played for years with large diamonds, believing
-them to be white pebbles. Sir, it’s the same
-thing here precisely, and that’s all there is to it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I need hardly say, of course, that here there’s a
-good deal of risk,” said Thompson. “You have
-naturally all of you thought well over that?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We have thought well over everything. If
-you care to attend the rooms on Saturday—<span class='it'>Saturday</span>
-night—at about ten, you will see for yourself
-how complete in every respect our thought
-has been. And you will be amused, I fancy, at
-the little scene you will witness, in which I will
-undertake, Mr. Bailey Thompson, you shall be
-neither hurt nor hustled,” added Mr. Brentin,
-considerately.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we strolled back with Thompson to his
-hotel, I could, having some sort of gift that way,
-see quite well what was passing in his mind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After all, he said to himself, he was an English
-detective; why should he interfere to protect
-a French company who couldn’t look after
-themselves? Why, too, should he spoil gentlemen’s
-sport? They didn’t want the money for
-themselves; they wanted it (as we had always
-been careful to explain) for hospitals and good
-works generally. It wasn’t as if we were vulgar
-cracksmen, long firm swindlers, gentry he had
-been brought up to struggle with and defeat
-all his life. Hang it all! we were gentlemen
-and had treated him well, quite as one of ourselves.
-We had been frank and above-board,
-and had told him everything from the first.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I could see it was on the tip of his tongue to
-blurt out: “Mr. Brentin and Mr. Blacker! you
-have been quite frank with me, and, at any cost,
-I will be quite frank with you. I am a detective
-from Scotland Yard, and unless you promise me
-to give up this scheme of yours—which, as
-Heaven shall judge me, will, I believe, be successful!—it
-will be my unpleasant duty to warn
-the police here and have you all arrested.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But there lay the difficulty, eh? We could
-scarcely be arrested for an idea, without overt
-act of any kind. Wouldn’t it be a complete
-answer if we declared the whole thing a practical
-joke, and turned the tables by laughing at
-him for being so simple as to believe it? No,
-if we were to be successfully caught, we must be
-caught in the act, that was clear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then I felt the detective was too strong in
-him: the desire for the reward, the fame of such
-a capture; his professional pride, in short, bulked
-too large before him to be ignored.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No! he said to himself, if we would go on
-with it, why we must take the consequences.
-For his part, he would go to the Principality
-police, arm a couple of dozen of them, and have
-them ready in the rooms. It would be a simple
-matter, for hadn’t we always told him our revolvers
-would not be loaded?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When, after a long silence, he ended by shrugging
-his shoulders, I was as well aware of his resolve
-as though he had spoken it out loud.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We left him at the door of his hotel, undertaking
-to meet him in the rooms at nine and
-show him every detail of our plan, so that we
-might have the benefit of his final advice on any
-possible weak points.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There is, of course, the chance,” I observed
-to Brentin, “of his going off at once to the police,
-and getting them to be present on Friday night
-as well, <span class='it'>ex majori cautelâ</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, he won’t do that! We’ve told him no
-lies at present.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“None at any rate that he has discovered.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The same thing!—and if we say Saturday, he
-probably believes we mean it. He won’t go to the
-police till the very last moment; he wouldn’t go
-then if only there were any way of managing the
-business by himself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And our ultimate arrest, now that he knows
-us all?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, sir, that will be the affair of the authorities
-here; that is, of course, the chief risk
-we have now to run. My own notion, however,
-always has been that, if only for fear of advertising
-our success too widely, and suggesting the
-scheme to others, the Casino Company will put
-up with their loss, just as though we had legitimately
-won the boodle at play.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let us hope so!” I said, and parted from
-him with a warm grasp of the hand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I went down to the Condamine, and
-signalled for the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span> boat. We had left
-Lucy on board all day, for fear of her running
-up against Bailey Thompson on shore, and so
-arousing his suspicions by her presence. As for
-old Crage’s finding means to let him know what,
-in a fit of temper, he had blurted out, that I
-didn’t think altogether likely; in the first place,
-he would probably be afraid; and in the second,
-he would believe Lucy had by this time warned
-us and the whole affair was off. So I spent a
-very happy hour with dear Lucy on board, finding
-her sewing in a very bewitching tea-gown of
-my sister’s, and, going back to the hotel, discovered
-Teddy outside in a considerable state of
-alarm and excitement. He had just seen Thompson
-leaving the hotel, parting from Mrs. Wingham
-at the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, Vincent!” he cried, “it’s not too late;
-we’d better hook it, we had really!”—and other
-terrified absurdities—the fact being, no doubt,
-that Thompson had merely come up to see the
-old lady and find out from her whether she
-knew if Saturday really was the day, or if we
-were by any chance trying to put him off the
-scent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I calmed Teddy with the assurance all was
-going on perfectly well, and that he had only to
-keep calm to do himself and his militia training
-full justice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hang it all!” I said to him, “you are as
-nearly as possible a British officer; do, for goodness’
-sake, try and behave like one.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But he never did, from first to last; and for
-that, painful as it is, I feel myself obliged publicly
-to censure him here, in print.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p146'>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:1em;'>EXIT MR. BAILEY THOMPSON</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Friday</span> dawned, blue and auspicious, and
-soon after twelve Brentin and I called at his
-hotel to conduct the luckless Thompson on board
-the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span>. We had matured our little plan,
-and as we went down the hill to the Condamine
-we began to put it in motion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this wise. Brentin suddenly pulled up
-short, saying: “Sakes alive! I have forgotten
-to telegraph to the hotel at Venice to secure
-our rooms. Mr. Blacker, will you conduct our
-friend to the boat, and I will join you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I went on with Thompson to the boat lying
-ready for us, and there we waited. Then at the
-top of the hill appeared Brentin, as per arrangement,
-outside the telegraph office, making weird
-signals with his arms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What on earth is he doing?” I innocently
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He apparently wants you,” replied the unsuspicious
-Thompson; “perhaps he has forgotten
-the name of the hotel.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, Lord!” I ejaculated, “and I shall have
-to go all the way back up that horrible hill.
-Don’t you wait for me, please. If you don’t
-mind just going on board and sending the boat
-back, we shall be ready, and by that time Parsons
-and Hines will have joined us. We are a
-little too early as it is.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The others come from the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>, I presume?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes; there’s the boat”—for we had arranged
-they should at any rate start, and not turn back
-till they had seen the detective decoyed below
-deck on board the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Au revoir!</span>” I cried, and without turning,
-up the hill I hastened, only too delighted and
-relieved to hear the boat put off and the soft
-plash of the oars behind me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I never turned till I got to the telegraph office,
-and then Brentin and I stood there and watched
-with breathless interest. Brentin had glasses
-with him, and at once turned them on the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Van Ginkel receives him,” he chuckled,
-“with stately, old-fashioned courtesy. Thompson
-explains how it is he is alone, and that the
-boat is to go back for us. Van Ginkel insists on
-taking his plaid shawl, and entreats him to come
-below out of the sun. He leads the way, and they
-go to the head of the saloon companion-ladder,
-engaged in affable conversation and friendly rivalry
-for the shawl. They disappear. Bravo!
-The <span class='it'>Amaranth</span> boat turns back. The <span class='it'>Saratoga</span>
-men rapidly haul their own boat on board. The
-anchor is apparently already weighed. Animated
-figures cross and recross the deck. Orders are
-rapidly given—she’s off! By Heaven, sir, she’s off!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A long pause, while the shapely <span class='it'>Saratoga</span> begins
-to leave the harbor and head for the open
-sea. She crosses the bows of the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>,
-where the rest of our company are standing, with
-Captain Evans and his crew, waiting and watching.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah, ha!” roared Brentin, suddenly. “Thompson’s
-head reappears, without his hat. He looks
-round him, scared. He hurries to the captain,
-who is walking the bridge, his hands behind him,
-his eye watchful. He speaks to the captain.
-He shouts, he beats the bridge, he foams at the
-mouth. The captain pays him no heed—no heed,
-sir, whatever. He even casually steps on his
-fingers. Ha! he rushes to the man at the wheel.
-He gesticulates, he yells, he attempts to seize
-the wheel. Steady, Scotland Yard! You should
-know better than that. Bravo! The man at
-the wheel kicks a long leg out at him and shouts
-to the captain. The captain gives sharp, decisive
-orders. Bravo! Well done! Bailey Thompson
-is seized by a couple of Long Tom Coffins and
-hurried away. They hurry him, struggling violently,
-to the head of the companion-ladder.
-Down with him, gentlemen! Down with him,
-among the dead men! Bravo!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bailey Thompson’s struggle and discomfiture
-were watched by our friends on the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>
-with interest at least as keen as ours. As the
-<span class='it'>Saratoga</span> fell away across their bows, and Thompson
-disappeared down the companion-ladder,
-Captain Evans takes off his cap and leads his
-brave fellows to a cheer. They cheer vociferously
-and derisively, the ladies wave their handkerchiefs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Exit Mr. Bailey Thompson!” cried Brentin,
-and taking off his hat he gave a loud “Hurray!”
-much to the astonishment of the man outside
-the telegraph office, who stands there with a
-tray of colored pince-nez for sale, as a protection
-against the Monte Carlo glare of white roads
-and blue sparkling sea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Just then up came Parsons and Hines.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, is it all right? Has he gone? Have
-they got him?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Look for yourselves, gentlemen!” he cried,
-handing them the glass. “Search earth and sky
-for vestiges of Mr. Bailey Thompson, of Scotland
-Yard and Brixton. You will not find him.
-He has passed out of our ken. He’s on his way
-to Majorca, Minorca, Ivaca, and the Balearic Isles
-generally. For purposes of any active mischief
-he is as dead and harmless as the dodo.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For the present—only for the present!” muttered
-Teddy, who was in his usual pallid condition.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And now,” said Brentin, with satisfaction,
-putting away his glasses, “rebellion being dead,
-let us go back to the ‘Monopôle,’ enjoy our
-breakfast, and pay our bill. Then we pack up
-and get our things on board the yacht. Fortune
-smiles on us, gentlemen,” he added, “as ever on
-the bold. Nothing, so far, could be better!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the terrace of the “Monopôle” we took a
-last look over the sea before going in to breakfast.
-There was the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span>, rapidly growing diminutive
-as she bustled far away out to sea to the
-right. Exit Mr. Bailey Thompson, indeed!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Wingham’s place, between Mrs. Sellars
-and Miss Marter, was empty. They told Teddy
-the old lady had breakfasted early, and was down
-at the rooms for a long afternoon’s play.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And Mr. Parsons was leaving? How sorry
-they were—how much they would miss him!
-Certainly they would say good-bye to Mrs. Wingham
-for him. Oh, we were all going to Bordighera
-in a friend’s yacht, and should most probably
-not return. Well, good-bye. <span class='it'>Bon voyage!</span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now she’ll think,” said the sagacious Teddy,
-as he joined us, “the whole affair’s off, notwithstanding
-my telling her it was fixed for
-Saturday. She’ll fancy we’ve got frightened, or
-been warned, and have bolted. Good business!”</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p151'>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-THE GREAT NIGHT—DINNER AT THE “HÔTEL DE PARIS”—A
-LAST LOOK ROUND—THE SACK AND ITS INCIDENTS—FLIGHT
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>By</span> five o’clock of that same afternoon—Friday,
-January 17th—we and our luggage were all
-safe on board the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Our luggage stowed away and our cabin arrangements
-made (rather a tight fit we found it),
-I took Lucy on shore to show her round, or give
-her a walk rather, as it was nearly dark; for
-now that Bailey Thompson was well out at sea,
-there was no danger of her being met and recognized.
-For the night, our plan of action briefly
-was, that at a quarter to eight we were all to
-dine together at the “Hôtel de Paris,” the ladies
-afterwards to return on board the yacht. At
-ten we gentlemen, with the six sailors, were to
-be in the rooms; at half-past, precisely, the start
-was to be made.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At ten-twenty the boats, two of them, were to
-leave the yacht and be ready at the spot I have
-indicated. They were not to start a minute
-earlier, for fear of exciting suspicions among any
-of the firemen or police who might be about on
-the terrace. For them, on Brentin’s suggestion,
-we had arranged a small pyrotechnic display—what
-he called “fire-crackers”—on the terrace
-not far from the band-stand. Parsons had purchased
-a “Devil among the Tailors” over at Mentone,
-and Jarvis, one of the sailors—the same, by-the-way,
-who had first accosted us on the pier
-at Ryde—was to light it one minute before the
-half-hour. We calculated it would explode and
-draw the firemen away, just about the time when
-they would otherwise be in demand to stop us in
-our rush down the terrace steps, and through
-the rickety gate on to the railway line.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Our dinner at the “Hôtel de Paris” was a very
-expensive and merry one. It was lucky, by-the-way,
-as it turned out, that I ate and drank a
-good deal more than usual, for it was almost
-four-and-twenty hours before I got anything approaching
-a proper meal again; through that
-idiot Teddy Parsons’ fault, as presently will
-plainly enough appear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Soon after half-past nine we sent the ladies off
-in a carriage down to the Condamine to go on
-board the yacht. It was a solemn moment, for
-it was quite on the cards I might never see any
-of them again, and one was my sweetheart and
-one my sister. Indeed, so affected was I, that I
-bent into the carriage and kissed Miss Rybot
-by mistake, which made everybody but Arthur
-Masters laugh. I knew I had made the mistake
-directly my lips touched her cheek, for hers was
-hard and cold as an apple off wet grass, whereas
-dear Lucy’s was ever soft and warm as a sunny
-peach.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then they drove away, laughing and kissing
-their hands; Lucy particularly merry, for she
-still knew nothing of what we were almost immediately
-going to do, and was quite gay at the
-thought of leaving Monte Carlo so soon—to
-which unhallowed spot, as most good and sensitive
-women, she had taken the supremest dislike.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We gentlemen sat a little time smoking, in
-somewhat perturbed silence, and just before ten
-we had a glass of old brandy each, paid our bill,
-and left. The others went on into the rooms,
-while Brentin and I walked down on to the terrace
-to have a last look at the gate, and see it
-was still open; or, rather, would open to a slight
-push.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The night was singularly mild, dark, and heavy;
-the terrace absolutely deserted. There was not
-a star in the dense, low sky; they all seemed
-fallen on shore, outlining the Condamine and
-heights of Monaco in the many regular pin-pricks
-of the gas-lamps. From the “Café de Paris”
-came the swirl of the Hungarian band; from the
-Casino concert-room, the high notes of Madame
-Eames singing in the new opera; from the Condamine,
-the jingle of the omnibus bells. Not another
-sound of life from earth or heaven; but
-mainly the persistent jangle of those omnibus
-bells, as though sadly shaken by some dyspeptic
-Folly. The Mediterranean, as ever, was absolutely
-still.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I could have stayed there a long time, but—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Come!” whispered Brentin, and taking my
-arm, walked me back up the steps towards the
-rooms. As we passed the end of the concert-room,
-I noticed that up against the outside balconies,
-at the back of the stage, ladders were
-reared, so that, in case of fire, the artistes
-might have some other chance of escape than
-the dubious one of fighting their way through
-the <span class='it'>salle</span>. I found myself fitfully wondering
-whether those ladders would be used.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Come!” whispered Brentin, again, feeling, I
-dare say, the alarm in my elbow. “Courage!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For I do not mind confessing here in print
-that, as the hour approached, I began to feel
-frightened at the audacity of what we were going
-to do, and, if only I could—consistently with
-my honor—would willingly have withdrawn;
-nay, to put it plainly, turned tail and bolted.
-My revolver, loaded with blank cartridge only, in
-the pocket of my smoking-jacket beat remindfully
-against my hip as I walked up the Casino
-steps. Even now as I write, months after the occurrence,
-the tremor of that hour seizes me and
-my hand shakes so I can scarcely guide the pen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another moment, and we had walked through
-the hall, and passed the swing-doors into the
-stifling gambling-rooms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is extremely unlikely I ever visit Monte
-Carlo again; indeed, my conduct, on this the
-last occasion I entered the rooms, rather precludes
-me from ever even making the attempt;
-but if ever I do, they will never make the same
-impression on me as they did that warm January
-evening when Brentin and I strolled into them
-arm in arm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Every incident of that memorable evening,
-every face I then saw, is photographed into my
-memory, still remains there distinct and indelible.
-The rooms, either because of the attraction
-of a new opera or because the night was so
-warm, were somewhat empty. The crowds were
-only round the table, and the parquet flooring
-between looked more than usually vacant and
-dull.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dimmer they looked, too, and more than ever
-badly lit; and the air seemed even heavier
-charged with gamblers’ exasperation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, in some slight particulars, we had modified
-our original plan. We had long given over
-all attempt to turn the light out, for one thing,
-since we had never been able to discover where
-the mains were; probably somewhere well out
-of sight, down below among the vaults, which
-also we had decided not to attempt. Nor did we
-intend to do anything towards securing the gamblers’
-valuables, as at one time we had projected.
-It was very like vulgar robbery, to begin with,
-and next, as Thompson had pointed out, it would
-take too much time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Directly we got inside, Brentin looked up at
-the clock over the door and set his watch by it;
-then we strolled off to find the rest, and, showing
-each of them the watch, saw that each had
-the precise time. Our six sailors were wandering
-about genteelly in pairs; to each Brentin whispered,
-“Got your bag all right?” and each
-nodded a reply. Each had a linen bag buttoned
-inside his short, respectable reefer jacket. One
-who, I fear, was not quite sober, a man named
-Barker, took his bag out with a stupid laugh
-to show us; whereupon his companion (Frank
-Joyce, from Sandown, in the Isle of Wight, who
-had him by the arm) said, “Now then, Barker,
-don’t be a fool, it ain’t time yet.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was then between the ten minutes and the
-quarter past ten.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When we had visited the rooms with Bailey
-Thompson the night before, and explained our
-plan in detail on the spot, we had, by his advice,
-and very wisely, reversed it. Previously, we had
-designed to begin at the first, the <span class='it'>roulette</span> tables,
-and drive the people gradually before us into the
-last room, towards the <span class='it'>trente-et-quarante</span>; but
-that, as he pointed out, would force us to work
-with our backs to the exit and bring us between
-two fires as it were; whereas, if we began in the
-farthest rooms and cleared the <span class='it'>trente-et-quarante</span>
-tables first, we should have our faces to the
-doors, and, by driving everybody before us, secure
-the further advantage of increasing the confusion
-that would arise from the people rushing in
-to see what was wrong and meeting the people
-rushing out. And through that surging, terrified
-mass we ought to have no difficulty in forcing
-a passage, if only we kept our unloaded
-revolvers up to the mark and frowned unflinchingly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As for masking ourselves, which we had also
-at first designed, Thompson was strongly against
-it; it would all take time, and might only obscure
-our vision; for, as he truly pointed out,
-that sort of thing scarcely ever fits properly....
-I gave a nervous glance at my watch, and found
-it nearly ten-twenty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was standing just by the last <span class='it'>roulette</span> table,
-and saw one or two little things that, as I have
-said, are still distinctly photographed in my
-memory. There were two young men standing
-behind me, and one said, “I’ll just chuck a louis
-on the table and see where it will fall.” It fell
-on the number eighteen, and eighteen actually
-turned up! He laughed excitedly as the croupier
-pushed him thirty-five times his stake. “That’s
-not bad for my one gentle little louis, eh?” he
-giggled.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Opposite, a brown-faced English yachtsman,
-over from Mentone, was steadily backing the
-colors with notes of five hundred francs. He
-was always right; he changed from side to side,
-and always hit the right red or black. He was
-watched by two common Englishmen, with long
-upper lips and ridiculous pantaloon beards,
-dressed in shiny broadcloth. “That feller’s won
-another twenty-pound,” said one of them, gaping.
-“We must bring Louisa in to see this.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now it was past the ten-twenty, and I moved
-off into the <span class='it'>trente-et-quarante</span> rooms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Every one who has been to Monte Carlo knows
-that the four <span class='it'>trente-et-quarante</span> tables are in the
-two end rooms, two in each.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the right-hand room were to be stationed
-Brentin, Parsons, and I, with three of the sailors;
-in the left, Forsyth, Masters, and Hines,
-with the other three. Brentin was to give the
-signal in our room—“<span class='it'>Levez les mains!</span>”—and
-Hines in the other, while the immediate discharge
-of the “Devil among the Tailors” outside on the
-terrace would, we hoped, increase the confusion
-and alarm within. It was rather awkward that
-we were forced to go to work a little out of sight
-of each other; for, though there is an opening
-between the rooms, we meant to begin well at
-the back, and the opening did not so far reach
-as to bring us in sight of each other.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was close on the twenty-five minutes past
-ten, and so alarmed was I at the difficulties
-which, now we were actually on the spot ready
-to overcome them, loomed so desperately large,
-that I would willingly have sacrificed half my income
-to be allowed to leave without even making
-the attempt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On one side of me was Brentin; on the other
-a very pretty, smart young Englishwoman,
-standing with a purse in her hand, watching the
-run on black. As in a dream, I noticed all the
-details of her dress, the white facings of her
-dark jacket on the cuffs and pockets, the piquant
-spots on her veil. Quietly, as though she were
-paying for a pair of gloves, she staked all the
-gold she had left, about twenty pounds, and lost
-that. She searched her purse, found it quite
-empty, snapped it leisurely, and sauntered away.
-Brentin whispered me he had seen her stake roll
-after roll of notes, and lose them all. Beautifully
-dressed, with a hanging, jewelled little
-watch and many neat gold bracelets, I had often
-seen her strolling about the gardens, neither
-speaking to nor looking at any one; now I found
-myself stupidly wondering who she was, even envying
-her, notwithstanding her totally cleaned-out
-condition.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The relentless minutes stole on. I looked
-piteously at Brentin, glaring with resolution
-straight in front of him, his hand in his pocket
-fingering his revolver; at Parsons, white as this
-paper, his legs bending under him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Piteously I looked at the table in front of me;
-at the croupiers, with their cropped black heads
-and emotionless faces; at the <span class='it'>chef</span> sitting above
-them, his bored, round back towards me; at the
-delicately pretty, demure Italian, olive-skinned
-and colorless, leaning her arm, in its long white
-glove, over the back of his chair; at the young
-Frenchman staking his thousand-franc notes,
-his forehead and eyes twitching with excitement,
-or some nervous complaint; at the gaunt English
-girl—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Bang!</span> from the terrace outside. <span class='it'>Bang!
-bang!</span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I gave a jump like a terrified horse. It was
-the “Devil among the Tailors,” set off a minute
-or two too soon by our friend and accomplice,
-the sailor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The confusion and alarm it caused was nothing
-compared to what followed. I had just time
-to see the Italian lady’s frightened profile, as she
-turned and put her white glove up to her smooth
-cheek, when the bold Brentin gave a hoarse
-shout—“<span class='it'>Levez les mains!</span>”—and produced the
-revolver. Then, indeed, a panic set in! comparable,
-I imagine, to nothing but the sudden striking
-of a ship.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At first a dead pause, and then immediately a
-rushing to and fro, as of rats in a pit, the haggard
-looking in each other’s fallen, discomposed
-faces. And then the noise! the overthrow of
-chairs and the dragging of them along the parquet
-floor, caught in screaming women’s dresses
-as they scudded away like sea-shore birds, bent
-low, with their hands up to their ears, while the
-shouting, swearing, groaning men clutched at
-their money, and tried to thrust it in their
-pockets, as they leaped and huddled themselves
-away, the louis falling and tinkling on the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I saw before me a hideous, moving frieze of
-terror, of distorted faces—Russian, French, German,
-Italian, English, American, Greek—all reduced
-to the same monotony of look under the
-overmastering influence of the same passion—abject
-fear. The English were no better than
-the rest; they were a little quicker in getting
-away, perhaps, and that was all. The confusion
-of tongues was as complete as though, on the
-Tower of Babel, some one had screamed the
-foundations were giving way, and all must save
-themselves as best they could.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As in a battle the soldier knows only incidents,
-the faces he sees as frightened or determined
-as his own, the eyes peering into his
-through smoke he mostly himself seems to make;
-so, out of this action—so famous and yet so little
-known—can I only report the events that met
-me in my narrow section of the struggle, a section
-drawn almost in parallel straight lines from
-the point I started at to the point of exit at the
-farther end of the rooms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>First it was the <span class='it'>chef</span>, on his high chair facing
-me, who fell over backwards, ridiculous enough
-at such a time of tragic import. One of the
-croupiers, in jumping horrified to his feet, gave
-him a tilt and over he went. He was a youngish
-man, with round, fat, clean-shaven cheeks, and a
-small, bristling, black mustache. His arms and
-legs waved and kicked like an impaled insect;
-his mouth opened with a stupendous screaming
-oath, and as he fell—strange how at all times
-one notices details!—I saw he wore half-shoes
-and blue socks.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In another minute we were at the vacant table,
-the <span class='it'>chef</span> crawling away under a sofa-seat against
-the wall, and two of our gallant sailors were
-stuffing the notes and coins into their linen bags.
-The second table was equally deserted, and there
-the not-quite-sober sailor, Barker, with empty,
-delighted laughter, was already scratching the
-notes out of the metal stand they are always kept
-in. Suddenly I saw he nearly fell; some one
-under the table had him by the leg. He clutched
-the <span class='it'>chef’s</span> empty high chair, and, with a mighty
-oath and mighty random kick, released himself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hurry up, men! hurry up!” chanted Brentin,
-as we moved forward irresistibly over the
-bare floor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Bang!</span> suddenly went Teddy’s revolver off,
-in his nervousness, close to my ear. It was a
-mistake, but not altogether a disastrous one; it
-showed we were in earnest, and soon cleared
-some of the people away from the space between
-the roulette rooms and the <span class='it'>trente-et-quarante</span>.
-Like a wave that breaks against the shore and
-then returns, so these broken people, spent
-against the struggling mass round the swing-doors,
-had gushed back again and almost reached
-the point they started from.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the room on the left, where Hines and
-his party were at work, I suddenly heard Arthur
-Masters shout, “Look out, Forsyth!” At what,
-I know not; I just gave a look in their direction,
-and their room seemed as vacant of opposition as
-ours.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Forward!” cried Brentin. “Hurry up!
-hurry up!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The sailors, with their bags, fell behind us,
-and forward we three charged. As we came
-through the sort of ante-chamber dividing the
-rooms, there, through the other door, at the
-same moment, came Hines, Forsyth, and Masters,
-hurrying.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bravo!” screamed to them the excited Brentin.
-“The left-hand table, gentlemen!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Right and left the tables were absolutely deserted.
-As the sailors pounced on and proceeded
-to clear them, I had an unobstructed view down
-the length of the remaining rooms right to the
-exit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such a scene of terrified, shouting, screaming
-confusion I never saw; nor ever shall, unless my
-lurid evil star should one day carry me into the
-hot heart of a theatre-panic, the uncontrollable
-frenzied meeting of a fighting pit, gallery, dress
-circle, and stalls. They say a man will give all he
-hath for his life, and here were innumerable men
-and women, believing their precious lives in peril,
-giving all their fiery energies play in their efforts
-to best their neighbor and reach the door. Often,
-by-the-way, as I have heard of people wringing
-their hands, this was the only occasion on which
-I ever really saw it done. One of the footmen,
-in his absurd, ill-fitting livery, was standing on
-one of the side sofas, a chap with laughable long
-whiskers, a discolored beak of a nose, and a rabbit
-mouth; there he stood, dancing up and down,
-his face all puckered with terror, actually wringing
-his hands in his misfitting long sleeves.
-Then he suddenly fell over and crawled away,
-yelping like a frightened lap-dog, and for the
-life of me I couldn’t help a spirit of laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Gracious!” yelled Brentin, above the indescribable
-din, “I hope no one will be injured.
-Loose off your gun, friend Parsons.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Bang!</span> went Teddy’s revolver. I looked at
-him; his face was still dead white, while his
-mouth was working and distorted with a dreadful
-grin. <span class='it'>Bang!</span> it went again, while Teddy
-gave a silly laugh. Like a shot in a mine
-that clears the air, or like the blowing out of
-a candle at ten paces, the blank discharge had
-its due effect. The tortured mass heaved and
-groaned, yielding irresistibly to the pressure of
-their terrors; irresistibly they began to pour and
-gush out through the swing-doors at the end.
-Every second, so fast they went, our road to
-safety was notably being cleared for us.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Forward! Forward!” Brentin sang.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To the right we went again into the next
-room, in the same irreproachable order, with
-the same sublime results. Arthur Masters, in
-all the energetic glory of battle, was waving his
-revolver, trying to crack it, beating it against
-his thigh, as though it were a whip, cheering
-on his men like hounds. He is master, as I have
-mentioned, of a pack of harriers in Hertfordshire,
-and all the time he was at work in the last
-two rooms he was musically crying, “Melody!
-Harmony! Trixie! Hie over, lass, hie over!”
-And once, as one of his sailors bent on the floor
-over a few scattered louis, he roared at him,
-“ ’Ware trash!” When safe in England, I told
-him of it afterwards. He laughed and declared
-he hadn’t the slightest recollection of doing anything
-of the sort.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now will it be believed that, so universal was
-the panic, at one of the tables only, at the bottom
-one in the room before the last, was there
-anybody found to receive us! And that not so
-much, I fancy, in the spirit of opposition as of
-curiosity, or perhaps inability to move.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For there we found an English lady tranquilly
-seated—elderly, perhaps sixty, with a shrewd,
-not unpleasant face. To this day I don’t know
-her name, but I know her quite well by sight,
-having often seen her driving in Piccadilly and
-Bond Street. At the back of her chair her husband
-was standing, eye-glass in eye; a tall man
-with a large head, rather of the empty House of
-Commons air of importance, coolly watching us.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You will be good enough not to touch this
-lady’s money,” he said, as our men pounced on
-the table. Then, as a sort of after-thought, he
-added, “You ought to be ashamed of yourselves.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Write to the <span class='it'>Times</span>,” chuckled Brentin, impudently.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old lady looked hard at me, as much as to
-say, “I’ve seen <span class='it'>you</span> somewhere before, more respectably
-engaged than this.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And, before I forget, it is an odd thing that,
-only a week or so ago, I again met her driving
-in Piccadilly; I was in a cab with Lucy, and we
-met her victoria face to face. We stood side by
-side for quite three minutes in a block, and she
-recognized and stared at me in astonishment. I
-returned her stare, not rudely, I hope, and then
-positively couldn’t help beginning to laugh; she
-didn’t laugh back, but I could see quite well
-she was very near it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There still remained the end room of all and
-our exit through the doors. Now was the time
-for all our nerve, all our resource.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Breathlessly, I glanced up at the clock, and
-saw it was just over the twenty-five minutes to
-eleven. We had taken only some six or seven
-minutes to clear eleven tables; there still remained
-the two last and our rush for the yacht.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Our friends on the left hurried up to us, we
-having been slightly quicker on the right; and
-then, strangely enough, there was a moment’s
-dead silence, at any rate, in the rooms. In the
-pause we could hear the dull, frightened roar
-from the hall outside, and then, suddenly and
-faintly, the short, sharp, defiant call of a bugle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The gamblers and croupiers, still massed struggling
-round the exit, turned, many of them as
-though by an understanding, and faced us, some
-of them even crying “<span class='it'>Silence!</span>” “<span class='it'>Silence!</span>” The
-valets, clambering on the side seats, leaned towards
-us expectantly. It seemed as though they
-were looking for us to make them a speech, some
-kind of an apology for our inexplicable and outrageous
-conduct. It was a sort of “Gentlemen of
-the French Guard, fire first!” and though I don’t
-suppose it lasted more than a second, it seemed
-an age.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then Brentin stepped forward, and sweeping
-his revolver along the line of their expectant
-faces, said in his ordinary voice—and all the
-more authoritative and effective it sounded—“<span class='it'>Retirez-vous!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My gaze was fixed on a tall croupier, a man I
-had often seen walking about in a straw-hat
-with his little daughter; indeed, once I had
-stopped and kissed the child, she was so pretty.
-Then he had been delighted; now he was staring
-at me with hard, frightened eyes, grinding his
-teeth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As Brentin stepped forward, we stepped forward
-too.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Close up behind us, you men!” Masters
-called to the sailors. “Use your fists if they
-try to stop you!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Instantly the screaming and shouting began
-again. As we moved briskly and irresistibly forward,
-the seething crowd at the swing-doors
-melted away before us like wax before the fire.
-Men and women began to steal behind us and
-run back frantically into the vacant rooms we
-had just stripped and left.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Retirez-vous!</span>” cried Brentin, in a higher key.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I kept my eye on the tall croupier, clearly
-meditating mischief, and then suddenly covered
-him with my unloaded revolver. His face fell
-like a shutter; all at once he seemed to be struck
-imbecile. Death was staring at him, he fancied,
-down the stubborn, steel tube—death! and he had
-never made his <span class='it'>salut</span>—would die in the gambling-rooms!
-He fell back with the rest, using his
-elbows viciously, and out we went with a rush,
-like uncorked soda-water opened by an unskilful
-hand at a picnic.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>An arm reached out at me from behind the
-door as I darted through, and caught my coat.
-I gave myself a vigorous wrench and swore (the
-first and only time that night), while my pocket
-came tearing off in the villain’s grasp. He was
-very welcome to it, if only as a souvenir.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The hall was pretty empty, for most people
-who had escaped from the rooms had rushed
-wildly out into the night, in their terror. When
-the “Devil among the Tailors” first went off on
-the terrace, there had been shouts and cries of
-“<span class='it'>Les Anarchistes!</span>” and all who heard it thought
-the building was about to be blown to atoms with
-a bomb, and flew, like sand before the wind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Still, numbers were beginning to pour into the
-far end of the hall out from the concert-room,
-where the alarm was just spreading and playing
-the deuce with the new opera. As we ran
-through and down the steps to the right, I could
-hear the band still playing and some one singing.
-Then, evidently, the alarm reached the instrumentalists,
-for they stopped suddenly with a
-wheeze, like a musical box run down.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Down the steps we rushed, knocking some few
-of both sexes, I am ashamed to say, over and
-aside in our stride. Out of the watchful corner
-of my right eye I saw the waiters come running
-out of the “Café de Paris,” in their white aprons.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Outside, as we turned the corner of the building,
-to the left down on to the terrace, one or two
-firemen came bounding up the steps to meet us.
-One of them faced us, holding out his arms and
-saying something in French I didn’t catch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was addressed to Barker, whose only reply
-was to grunt and knock the man head over heels
-into a heap of cactus. Hating violence as I do,
-I am pleased to report it was absolutely the only
-blow struck the whole time, and was a singularly
-efficient one.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the bottom of the steps to the right we
-darted, so close together we might have been
-almost covered with a pocket-handkerchief, of
-the larger Derby-winner type.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Get in front, you men!” panted Brentin, in
-a sibilant whisper. “Take the first boat, this
-way!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The sailors plunged in front as Brentin pulled
-the gate open. Down the steps they clattered.
-One of them, as he passed me, I saw was trying
-to tie the tape round the neck of his linen bag
-with his teeth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now furious steps were rushing after us
-over the gravel of the terrace; menacing dark
-figures, many of them, were making for our
-gate.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Give ’em a fusillade!” hissed Hines, and
-turning we fired, each of us, pretty nearly the
-whole of our six blank barrels.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From that moment our retreat, which had
-hitherto been conducted in such beautiful order,
-became as loose and streaming as the tail of a
-comet. As for me, I fired most of my six barrels
-as I ran down the steps, straight over my head,
-anywhere. I can feel now the soft kick of my
-revolver as I held it loosely in my left hand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now I don’t know it is exactly to my credit,
-but it certainly says something for my physical
-condition, that I was first down. I plunged
-panting across the railway lines, and simply
-hurled myself down the embankment, on to the
-shore.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first boat with the sailors already in it, the
-boodle in its linen bags gleaming ghostily in a
-tumbled heap at the bottom, was just pushing
-off. I tore through the water up to my waist,
-and they soon had me on board, pulling me in
-excitedly by the arms. The night was so dark
-that, a dozen strokes from the shore, there was
-nothing to be seen but the yacht’s lights, fifty
-yards ahead. We flew over the water, the men
-talking, swearing, panting, and helping one another
-push at the oars. We were alongside almost
-immediately, and I was the first up on
-deck.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“All safe, sir?” cried the captain, as I swung
-myself up.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Get her ready,” I panted, “the others will
-be here in a minute.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aye, aye, sir!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My sister ran up and kissed me. Miss Rybot
-was standing at the taffrail, glaring like a young
-eagle over the black water, and drumming her
-fingers on the rail. A few heavy raindrops were
-beginning to fall.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where’s Lucy?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We sent her below; she’s reading a book.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I paused to listen for the other boat, and could
-hear the tearing of the oars, the thud of the rowlocks.
-Away down from Monaco came the stern
-and menacing beat of a drum. Through the
-open lighted windows of the Casino concert-room
-I could see dark figures preparing to descend
-the ladders I had noticed considerately
-placed there against the balconies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then, suddenly, for the first time since
-we had been aboard, just as the other boat came
-tearing alongside and I stumbled off breathlessly
-below, it began to rain in earnest, a seething,
-hissing downpour; what my old Derbyshire
-nurse used picturesquely to call, <span class='it'>whole water</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the time I reached Lucy’s cabin door we
-were well under weigh, shouldering our way
-swiftly and sturdily through the still, wet night.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p171'>CHAPTER XX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-WE DISCOVER TEDDY PARSONS IS LEFT BEHIND—I MAKE
-UP MY MIND—TO THE RESCUE!—UNMANLY CONDUCT
-OF THE OTHERS—I GO ALONE—DISGUISE—THE GARDE
-CHAMPÊTRE
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='sc'>It’s</span> all over!” I cried to Lucy, as I stumbled
-in; “we’ve done it beautifully! We’re all
-safe, without a scratch!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then, so overwrought was I with the long
-tension, I became quite hysterical.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I went off into a fit of laughter, and at last, with
-the silly, happy tears chasing one another like
-sheep down my face, I managed to tell her she
-was free now to go back to Wharton Park with
-her father and grandmother, that Bob Hines
-would have his swimming-bath and gymnasium,
-that the ho-ho-hospitals would all open their
-closed wards again, and Teddy Parsons breathe
-freely once more before his fierce old governor,
-the colonel, at Southport.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It was my idea!” I cried, “and we’ve done
-it with the greatest ease—I knew we should!—and
-we’re all safe; and oh, Lucy! do just come
-into the saloon and see how much we’ve got. It
-was my own idea, and the fools all said it was
-impossible, and just look how simple it’s been,
-after all! Why, we must have carried off sixty
-thousand pounds, at least!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lucy seemed scarcely to understand what I
-was talking about; but she saw I was safe, and,
-feeling the yacht well under weigh, cared for
-very little else; so she held my hand and soothed
-and calmed me, and then followed with obedient
-laughter as I almost dragged her into the saloon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There, neatly piled under the electric light on
-the table, lay the linen bags, for all the world like
-the letter-bags in a mail-train; and there was
-Brentin, with wet hair and tie all on one side,
-beginning to empty them and arrange notes and
-gold in separate heaps. The silver was a little
-deficient, for we had given the sailors orders
-more or less to ignore the five-franc pieces.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of the gallant band, Hines and Forsyth were
-lying on the sofas with closed eyes, still slightly
-panting; my sister was looking on, leaning up
-against one of the pillars, where Miss Rybot,
-seated at the table, was unfolding the notes with
-her long, slim fingers, and arranging them in
-bundles according to their respective values.
-She was doing it with the greatest coolness, and,
-for some reason, a rather more haughty air of
-displeasure than usual.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, Master Vincent,” said Brentin, looking
-up at me with grim joy, “here we all are, and
-here is the boodle. Come and help count.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At that moment in came Masters. It appears
-he had fallen, getting down off the railway line,
-and muddied his trousers; he had been changing
-them, not caring to appear before his young
-lady with dirty knees.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hines and Forsyth roused themselves, and, almost
-in silence, we sat down to count; not a
-sound but a step or two on deck overhead and
-the throb of the engines, the luxurious rustle of
-notes, the pleasing chink of gold.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Suddenly my sister said, “Where’s Mr. Parsons?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Miss Rybot murmured, “Two hundred and
-forty-seven thousand-franc notes.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I looked round the saloon. “Yes, by-the-way,
-where’s Teddy?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was no answer, and Brentin stopped
-emptying the last bag. “In his cabin, probably,”
-he said, carelessly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, he’s not,” replied Masters, who shared it
-with him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He came in your boat,” said Brentin, looking
-across at me, startled.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Indeed, he didn’t!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was dead silence while for a moment
-we looked in each other’s frightened faces.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I got up and left the saloon. Outside I
-shouted for him; no answer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I hurried on deck to find the captain; it was
-still raining hard, and the captain was in his
-shelter up on the bridge. The light from the
-binnacle struck up on the resolute face of Joyce
-at the wheel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Captain Evans!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sir!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Did you see Mr. Parsons come on board?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Can’t say I particularly noticed him, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Joyce, did you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He wasn’t in our boat, was he?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who rowed the second boat?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bramber and Meikle, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I hurried away and at last found them in the
-galley with the cook, eating a surreptitious supper,
-with tin plates on their knees.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who came in the boat with you men?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mr. Brentin, Mr. Masters, Mr. Hines, and Mr.
-Forsyth,” said Bramber, with his mouth full.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s right!” said Meikle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You saw nothing of Mr. Parsons?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, sir; we thought he was with you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I stumbled down the companion and almost
-fell into the saloon. They had stopped counting
-and looked up at me anxiously. “Well?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s not on board!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sakes alive!” murmured Brentin. “That’s
-awkward!—for Mr. Parsons,” he considerately
-added.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My sister said “Good gracious, Vincent!”
-while with her silver pencil Miss Rybot began
-to draw poor Teddy’s insignificant profile on the
-back of one of the thousand-franc notes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I took a perturbed turn or two up and down
-the saloon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He can’t have fallen overboard?” ventured
-Masters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How could he, if he didn’t even come off in
-either of the boats?” some one replied.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was another pause, and then I asked:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How closely were you followed?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, not at all,” said Brentin. “After we
-loosed off the guns they all ran back.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Did anybody see Teddy after we got down
-the steps?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nobody answered. The fact was, I fear, we
-were all too busy looking after ourselves to look
-after any one else.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He may have fallen crossing the line. Did
-anybody notice whether any one fell?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Silence again. Then, with vague emphasis,
-Brentin said:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Depend upon it, Mr. Parsons is ay gentleman
-of so much resource that, wherever he is,
-he may safely be left to extricate himself from
-embarrassment. Let us resoom the counting.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I looked at him reproachfully.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mr. Brentin, it was agreed we stood by each
-other, I believe?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You were the first to get ahead, sir,” he replied,
-with what was meant for withering sarcasm,
-“and be off in the wrong boat.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Because I understood we were all safe.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So we were. So, no doubt, is Mr. Parsons.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And if at this moment he is in the hands of
-the police?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The base Brentin shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Tong pee pour louee</span>,” he said, in New York
-French. “Gentlemen, let us resoom the counting.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No!” I cried, banging the table, “not till we
-have decided what is to be done.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brentin frowned and looked across at me
-sourly. I couldn’t have believed success would
-so utterly change a man; but so it often is.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good chap, Teddy Parsons,” murmured
-Forsyth. “I’m sorry.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I do not know, sir,” scowled Brentin,
-“whether you propose to imperil the safety of
-five gentlemen, three elegant and refined ladies,
-and—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Was it, or was it not, understood we stood
-by each other?” I cried, impatiently. “See
-here, you fellows, you can’t be seriously thinking
-of leaving that poor little snipe in the lurch like
-this?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Parsons never was any particular friend of
-mine,” growled Hines.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Besides, I expect he’s all right,” said Masters,
-evasively. “He knows people over at Mentone;
-he’ll be off over there, you bet.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t you excite yourself, old boy,” murmured
-Forsyth. “Parsons is one of the cleverest
-chaps I know. He’ll get out of it all right, you
-take your oath. Besides, we can scarcely turn
-back now.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Turn back!” snarled Brentin. “This vessel
-is mine and under my orders. There will be no
-turning back, except over my dead body; and
-that’s all there is to it! Come, gentlemen,” he
-cried, impatiently, “resoom the counting.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And such was their incredible baseness that
-they actually began counting again, just as
-though poor Teddy Parsons had never been
-born. Only the ladies looked shocked, while
-Lucy kept her frightened eyes fixed on my face.
-As for me, my mind was soon made up.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” I said, resolutely, “if you won’t any
-of you come, I shall go back alone.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s the matter with walking on the
-waters?” sneered Brentin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In a few moments,” I continued, “we shall
-be off Cap Martin. Mr. Brentin, you will be
-good enough to give orders to have me put
-ashore there.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aye, aye, sir!” he jeered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shall make my way back to Monte Carlo
-alone—<span class='it'>alone!</span>” I cried, with pathetic emphasis,
-“and not rest till I have discovered what has
-become of our poor lost friend.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“As you please,” said Brentin, sharply; “only
-if <span class='it'>you</span> are caught you mustn’t expect any one of
-us to come to your rescue. It’s simply sending
-good money after bad.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Poor Lucy began to cry as, before leaving the
-saloon, I turned to them and fired my parting
-shot. I forget now precisely what it was, but I
-know it was both dignified and touching; feeling,
-as I did, rather more sorry for myself than
-even for poor Teddy. But it had no effect
-whatever in rousing any of them to accompany
-me on my perilous journey.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I went back to my cabin to change my
-clothes, for I was still in my smoking-suit with
-the torn pocket, and, so attired, could scarcely
-venture ashore. Disguise of some sort was
-clearly imperative before trusting myself again
-on the scene of our so recent successful labors.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, most providentially, before we left London,
-Brentin and I had gone off one morning to
-Clarkson’s, the wig-maker. It was quite possible,
-we had argued, we might have to fly, more
-or less closely pursued, and for that unpleasing
-eventuality had hired half a dozen wigs, among
-them two gray ones, for what are known, I believe,
-as “character old men.” I had at the
-same time bought a pair of gray whiskers, and,
-with my old regimental theatricals make-up box,
-packed them away, along with a quiet, elderly
-suit. I was always intrusted with the old men’s
-parts in our regimental theatricals, and invariably
-played them in a dress-coat, frilled shirt,
-and a bunch of seals with moiré antique ribbon,
-bending myself almost double and rapping with
-a crook stick in a manner so natural as to deceive
-even the men of my own company at the
-back of the hall. So that, unless I overacted, or
-a whisker came off, I felt pretty sure of not
-being recognized by comparative strangers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The quiet elderly suit I rapidly dressed myself
-in, and with my mackintosh cape, an umbrella,
-and the make-up box under my arm, went back
-to the saloon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was so offended at their pusillanimity I would
-look at no one but Brentin, who, with glittering
-eye and long cigar, was jotting down the amounts
-of our capture on a piece of paper.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You have given the necessary orders?” I
-asked him, coldly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aye, aye, sir!” he sneered. “The yacht is
-now slowing down.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lucy had gone to her cabin with my sister, in
-great distress, and Miss Rybot was sitting there
-with arms folded, rubbing her silver pencil between
-her lips.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good-bye, Mr. Blacker,” she said, “and good
-luck to you. I admire your sense of loyalty.
-You are the only <span class='it'>man</span> among the party!” she was
-good enough to add.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Pop, pop!” jeered the irrepressible Brentin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Arthur Masters turned pale, and from a generous
-fear of making him feel his inferiority by
-my presence, I bowed to them all in silence, and
-went up on deck.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By this time the yacht had stopped, and off the
-port-beam I could just distinguish the dark
-woods of Cap Martin looming. It was about
-half-past eleven, and still slightly raining, though,
-fortunately, quite warm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lucy came running up, and, sobbing, threw
-her arms round my neck. My sister kissed me
-affectionately, and said:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We shall see you at Venice, Vincent dear;
-take care of yourself!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And the next minute I was over the side and
-in the boat. I said never a word the whole time,
-being, I confess, deeply offended at the light way
-they all took my heroic resolution, and the assurance
-they showed in so readily believing (however
-flattering to my courage and address) it was
-all bound to be successful.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The men rowed me ashore in silence, bade me
-a respectful good-night, and I was soon clambering
-over the stones and up the rough bank. Soon
-I was in the comparative shelter of the woods,
-and there, finding the base of a fir-tree tolerably
-dry, I sat me down to think and wait for morning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Faintly I heard midnight strike from Monte
-Carlo, and then, so absorbed in thought and conjecture
-I grew, I fell asleep. When I woke, it
-was just getting gray; so I rose, stretched my
-stiff self, and had a good look about me. I knew
-tolerably well whereabouts I was; for my sister,
-Miss Rybot, Masters, and I had one day been over
-Cap Martin to tea at the hotel, and walked back
-through the woods, past the Empress Eugenie’s
-villa, on to the Mentone road, and so home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We had then noticed, not far from the villa, in
-the woods, a small sort of ancient decaying gamekeeper’s
-lodge, painted outside with arabesque
-in the Italian manner, and faint vanishing mottoes
-of conviviality and sport; and that I determined
-to make for, and see if I could there secure facilities
-for shaving off my mustache, at any rate.
-Then I proposed to retire into the woods again,
-and assume my character old man wig and whiskers,
-and so disguised make my way leisurely back
-into Monte Carlo, to try and find news of the
-luckless Teddy. Beyond that, I could devise no
-plan of any sort, determining to leave all to the
-hazard of the hour.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wandered about a good time in the dawn,
-and at last struck the lodge, soon after seven,
-when it was growing tolerably light. It was a
-fine morning, fortunately, though very raw and
-cold. The lodge door was open, and I peeped
-in. Probably, in the last century, it had been a
-luncheon-house for the Grimaldis on their shooting
-or pleasure expeditions; now it was rapidly
-decaying, and looked like a neglected summerhouse.
-No one was to be seen, and so, the foot
-of a ladder showing to the upper room, I entered
-and climbed it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was a bedroom, and evidently only just left;
-the bed was tumbled, and there was the faint,
-fragrant odor of a pipe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No time was to be lost, so I poured water into
-the basin (the owner had evidently not washed
-that morning) and got out my razors. I found a
-pair of scissors, and clipping myself as close as
-possible first and then screwing up my courage,
-for shaving in cold water is horribly painful,
-and lathering myself well, I set to work.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I hadn’t more than half done when I heard
-steps outside on the wet gravel; they came into
-the house, to the foot of the ladder; then they
-began slowly to climb. There was no help for it,
-I must go on and trust to luck; so on I went with
-my shaving, keeping an eye meantime in the glass
-on the door behind me, so that I might gain
-some impression of the owner before tackling
-and conciliating him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Fortunately, when I was trying for the army,
-before I failed and went into the militia, I had
-been for six months with a coach at Dinan, in
-Brittany, and spoke French well enough for all
-vulgar purposes; so when the ordinary type of an
-old soldier, <span class='it'>garde champêtre</span>, head appeared at
-the head of the ladder, bristling with astonishment,
-I felt more at home with it than perhaps
-the ordinary British officer, who has only learned
-his French at Wren’s or Scoone’s, would have
-done.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Dîtes donc!</span>” said the amazed man; “<span class='it'>je ne
-vous gêne pas?</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Du tout!</span>” I replied, “<span class='it'>entrez</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Mais, nom d’un chien!</span>” he cried, coming into
-the room. “<span class='it'>Qu’est ce que vous faites là?</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Vous voyez, n’est ce pas? Je me rase.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Je le vois bien! et après?</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Après? Je m’en vais.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a pause while the <span class='it'>garde champêtre</span>
-came alongside, and surveyed me with folded
-arms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Tears were in my eyes, for the process was a
-torture; but I went on with it heroically and in
-silence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last, “<span class='it'>Vous êtes Américain?</span>” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Mais oui. Toute ma vie!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>C’est bien. J’aime les Américains.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Merci! moi aussi!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The man laughed, and then he went on:
-“<span class='it'>Mais, dîtes donc! Pourquoi vous rasez-vous
-ici comme ça, dans ma chambre, ma propre
-chambre?</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>C’est que</span>—” I hesitatingly began, and then,
-with an inspired rush—“<span class='it'>voyez vous! Je suis
-marié, et je crois que ma femme me trompe.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Oh, la! la! Et après?</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Après? Je vais me déguiser et la pincer.
-C’est dur, n’est ce pas?</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Très dur!</span>” said the man, looking amused;
-“<span class='it'>mais les femmes sont toujours comme ça. Elle
-est Américaine?</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Anglaise.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Je déteste les Anglais! Continuez, mon bon
-monsieur. Je vous laisse.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Merci! Dans cinq minutes je descendrai.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Ne vous pressez pas, et déguisez-vous bien</span>,”
-he said, and, leaving the room, went half-way
-down the ladder. Then he turned and put his
-head into the room again, resting his elbows on
-the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Dîtes donc, mon bon monsieur</span>,” he said, evidently
-at some pains to check his mirth; “<span class='it'>avec
-qui croyez-vous que votre femme vous trompe?</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Je ne sais pas au juste. Avec un de mes
-amis, je crois.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Le misérable!</span>” he cried, theatrically. “<span class='it'>Un
-Français, sans doute?</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Oui, malheureusement.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Oh, la, la! Mais les amis sont comme ça.
-C’est très dur, tout de même. Courage! Je vais
-préparer le café. Au revoir.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With so sympathetic a <span class='it'>garde champêtre</span> I felt
-I was in luck, and might as well seize the opportunity
-for assuming my complete disguise, instead
-of taking to the woods; so I put on my
-wig and, with some spirit-gum, stuck on my
-gray whiskers, lined my face lightly, and, in
-five minutes, presented myself to the more
-than ever astonished <span class='it'>garde champêtre</span> as a respectable,
-well preserved, elderly gentleman of
-sixty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Mais nom d’un chien!</span>” he cried; “<span class='it'>c’est
-parfait! Elle ne vous reconnaîtra pas; jamais
-de la vie!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We sat down and drank the coffee, the best
-friends in the world; and then, giving him a
-louis and the box of make-up and razors as a
-souvenir, I left him with a warm shake of the
-hand, and went off through the wood to strike
-the Mentone road back into Monte Carlo.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I hadn’t gone twenty paces before he came
-running after me to say that if ever I wanted to
-disguise myself again I was to come to him and
-use his rooms, and that he would always keep
-the razors in order for the purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Mais c’est dur, tout de même</span>,” he added,
-sympathetically, as I promised.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The last I saw of him, he turned and waved
-his hand. “<span class='it'>Adieu, mon vieux!</span>” he cried.
-“<span class='it'>Bonne chance!</span>”</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p185'>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-IN MY DISGUISE I AM MISTAKEN FOR LORD B.—A CLUB
-ACQUAINTANCE—TEDDY AT THE LAW COURTS—MRS.
-WINGHAM—THE DEFENCE AND THE ACQUITTAL—WE
-BOLT
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Behold</span> me, then, in sexagenarian disguise,
-trudging back into Monte Carlo, with my mackintosh
-and umbrella. It was barely nine o’clock
-in the morning when I started; and, soon after
-ten, there I was standing once more in front of
-the Casino buildings, out of which, but a few
-hours before, I had so triumphantly rushed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Strange to say, there was no sign of anything
-extraordinary having occurred; there were the
-usual people sitting about reading the papers on
-the seats round the flower-beds, the usual attendants
-loafing on the steps, guarding the entrance.
-Over the building flapped, as ever, the
-dingy Monaco flag.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My first feeling was of intense annoyance
-and disgust that, notwithstanding our complete
-success, the nefarious business was apparently
-being carried on as usual. What on earth did
-it all mean? Were sixty thousand pounds as
-naught to them? Were they placidly going to
-put up with their loss, rather than advertise
-their misfortune? or, under this apparent calm,
-were there really depths of trouble and vengeance
-stirring—already rising—to ingulf poor Teddy,
-whom I never doubted from the first was captured,
-and now shortly about to appear before
-the Prince’s judges away up at Monaco, bent in
-painful submission at the criminal bar!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I sat down for a few moments to consider what
-should be done, and look about me for some one
-to whom I could apply for trustworthy information:
-what was thought of us, and what steps
-the authorities proposed to take.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was an old gentlemen, an Englishman,
-evidently, sitting on my seat; and, as one garrulous
-old person to another might, I proceeded to
-try him cautiously with a few questions. Did
-he know, could he tell me, at what hour the rooms
-opened?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He looked at me over his pince-nez, and said
-at twelve. Then he flipped his pince-nez off,
-smiled, and, giving me a friendly look, politely
-observed he believed he and I were members of
-the same distinguished club, the Mausolœum.
-He dared say I hadn’t forgotten dining next
-him there in the autumn, and the interesting
-talk we had then had.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aye, aye, aye,” I mumbled, in my fright, a
-mixture of Punch and Pantaloon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had seen me walking about before, he went
-on (what on earth did he mean by that, I wondered),
-and had meant to take the liberty of
-speaking to me. What I had said in the autumn
-had interested and impressed him very much, and
-he had often thought over it. Then he folded
-up his paper, and evidently began to lay himself
-out for a renewal of our supposed conversation,
-a prospect which much alarmed and disconcerted
-me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I scarcely liked to exercise the complete vigor
-of my youth and make an immediate bolt; for
-I had doddered up to the seat and, like an aged
-pensioner, sat me down with a loud sigh of relief—rather
-overacting, in fact; so, if I were to
-keep up the character, I must at least dodder
-away again when I left. Yet, however complimentary
-to my make-up, it was, just at present,
-a distinct nuisance to find myself mistaken for
-somebody else, and likely to be detained over
-a conversation which, under no circumstances,
-could ever have had the faintest interest for me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To prevent that, I cautiously began:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My servant tells me there was a robbery, or
-something of that sort, in the rooms last night.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh!” said my club comrade.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Have you heard anything about it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, indeed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Casino authorities keep a thing of that
-sort pretty close, I imagine,” I cautiously ventured.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’re quite right,” the old gentleman replied.
-“Quite right!” Then, after a pause, he
-went on, “I suppose you never spoke to Markham
-on the subject, after all?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, indeed, I didn’t,” I mumbled, making
-the best reply I could under the circumstances.
-“Fact is, I never saw him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, didn’t he turn up?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I forget.” And then I uneasily added, “You
-know what a feather-headed feller he is.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old gentleman laughed and said, “Somebody
-ought to speak to him, though.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, what’s the matter with his wife?” I
-said, unconsciously, dropping into one of Brentin’s
-phrases.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s more than I can tell you,” the old
-gentleman replied. “She’s looked like that for
-a long time now.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was so rapidly getting tired of this footling
-talk, not to mention the fibs it entailed and the
-precious time being wasted, that, at any cost, I
-determined to put a stop to it; so I rose with an
-effort, and saying, vaguely, “Well, I’ve got to
-meet my wife; good-day to you! I dare say I
-shall see you again somewhere about,” strolled
-off towards the Casino steps.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old gentleman, who had evidently looked
-forward to a long conversation, answered me
-rather gruffly, “Good-day!”—while straight up
-to one of the attendants at the head of the steps
-I walked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, <span class='it'>monsieur</span>,” the man politely said, “the
-rooms are open for play at twelve.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“As usual?” I pointedly observed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Altogether as usual.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Notwithstanding the robbery?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, as for that,” the man replied, shrugging
-his shoulders, “it was a very small affair. The
-miserable was caught and would be punished.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>An Englishman, I understood.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yes, an Englishman. No doubt at this moment
-he was being tried, and already safe in prison.
-“<span class='it'>Au revoir, monsieur! à votre service, monsieur!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My legs felt fully their assumed age as I turned
-and faltered down the steps. So all hope was
-over; poor Teddy was really caught, and the regiment
-would know him no more. Unless!—why,
-what could I do?—good gracious!—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was so deep in my own troubled thoughts
-and plans, I scarcely noticed my supposed old
-club friend on the seat; should not have noticed
-him at all, in fact, had I not just at this moment,
-when I was calling a carriage to drive up
-to the “Monopôle,” come plump on the other
-highly respectable elderly gentleman I evidently
-so closely resembled.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Face to face we met, and naturally stared at
-each other. Will it be believed we were absolutely
-exactly alike, down even to the cut and
-color of our clothes? For the first and only
-time in my life I saw myself at full length, myself
-as I should be at sixty (if I only took care
-of myself), sedate, healthy, a county magistrate,
-member of Brooke’s, with my youngest boy just
-leaving Eton. I hurried into the carriage and
-told the man to drive up to the “Monopôle” as
-fast as he could go, just giving a look round at
-my friend on the seat as I got in. He had turned,
-and, with his hands on his knees, was staring after
-me, dumbfounded. My double had turned and
-was staring after me too.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To both those gentlemen, if they should ever
-chance to read this work, I offer my sincere
-apology; they will understand now the reason of
-my accidental resemblance, and, as between men
-of the world, will no doubt forgive it. I can
-assure them both it will not occur again; how
-can it, seeing that wig and whiskers are buried
-under an olive-tree on the Mentone road?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the “Monopôle”—having, of course, no
-notion who I really was—they were very polite.
-No, Madame Wingham was not in; they couldn’t
-say where she was; a letter had come for her
-early and she had gone out. Instinctively, I felt
-the letter was from Teddy, imploring succor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I left the hotel at once and drove straight up
-to Monaco. At the cathedral I dismissed the
-carriage and walked on to the law courts. What
-to do I had no idea; watch the proceedings, at
-any rate, <span class='it'>incognito</span> from the back, and, at the
-worst, hear with my own sad ears how much poor
-Teddy got. Any thought of rescue was, of
-course, out of the question. What could a poor
-old person of sixty do against soldiers and gendarmes?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The criminal court of Monaco sits in a bare
-upper room, close to the cathedral. Outside,
-steep steps of the usual <span class='it'>Palais de Justice</span> inverted
-V-shape lead up to it, with, at their head, a
-bare flag-pole, like a barber’s sign. Up the
-steps I walked, and with beating heart (for my
-own sake, I confess, as much as for poor Teddy’s)
-entered the fatal, the lethal chamber. It
-was very full and stuffy. News of our victory
-and the capture of one of the band no doubt had
-spread, for the public part was crammed, tightly
-as sardines and garlic. Facing, under a crucifix,
-from over which the dingy green curtain was
-drawn, sat three judges; three real judges, in
-their bands and toques and ermine! Common
-white bedroom blinds scarcely kept the sun out,
-streaming in mistily on the members of the bar
-in beards and gowns, on the <span class='it'>greffier</span> busily writing,
-and the usher waiting to summon the luckless
-Parsons to the dock. Just at present the
-judges were bending the weight of their intellects
-on a couple of market-women charged with
-fighting; and there, tightly wedged against the
-partition, stood the forlorn Mrs. Wingham, a
-handkerchief in her black kid grasp, bending
-and talking tearfully to the barrister seated below,
-whom she apparently had engaged for the
-defence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I made my way to her and pulled her sleeve.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Come outside,” I whispered; “it’s I—hush!—Vincent
-Blacker.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She stared at me, and then at last followed
-obediently to the door. We stood outside at the
-head of the steps.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’ve got him, I suppose?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, you cowards!” she gasped, “to run
-away and leave him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Never mind that now,” I answered; “<span class='it'>I</span> have
-come back, at any rate. Let us consider what can
-be done. You’ve got some one to defend him?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But the man talks such horrible French, I
-can’t understand a word he says,” she moaned,
-“and he reeks of garlic. And where’s my brother,
-James Thompson?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s all right,” I evasively replied. “Never
-mind him just now. We must really concentrate
-ourselves on doing something for poor
-Teddy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, I dare say! Now you mind this, young
-man!” cried Mrs. Wingham, with sudden vindictiveness.
-“If he goes to prison you go, too!
-I won’t ’ear of his going alone. I’ll shout to the
-police! I’ll ’ave you arrested! He sha’n’t be
-the only one to suffer, poor young lamb!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The hair under my wig stood up on end, and
-even my false whiskers stiffened. The old woman
-was quite capable of executing her threat,
-and for a moment I felt, not sixty, but a hundred.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Outwardly, however, I was calm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Desperate cases require desperate remedies,”
-I judicially observed. “Take my arm and let
-us return to court. We’ll adopt our own line of
-defence. Come along, ma’am, and for the present
-kindly remember I am your husband and my
-name is Wingham.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The vicious old woman held me so tightly, I
-knew that if Teddy went under and were condemned
-she meant me to go under, too. Together
-we wedged our way to the partition, just
-above our odoriferous barrister. I was bending
-to speak to him when suddenly a bell was rung
-and Teddy was immediately ushered, nay, thrust,
-in, between a couple of gendarmes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Poor chap, he was almost unrecognizable, he
-had been so roughly handled. His smoking-suit
-was torn, and round his neck, in place of
-collar and tie, he had knotted a handkerchief,
-coster fashion; but what mostly disguised and
-disfigured him was his gashed and puffed face;
-for in falling down the steps he had fallen plump
-on a bunch of cactus, scoring him as though he
-had been mauled by an angry tigress. He never
-had been pretty, but now he looked exactly like
-the malefactor that, in the eye of the law, at
-any rate, I suppose he really was.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, just look at his face!” gasped Mrs.
-Wingham. “Oh, the poor creature!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hush!” I whispered; “for goodness’ sake
-keep calm. And kindly remember he’s our
-nephew.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I judged it wisest to hear the evidence against
-him before considering the line we should take in
-his defence. I contented myself for the present
-with whispering to our counsel that the prisoner
-was our nephew, his arrest a complete mistake,
-and he himself as innocent of any attempt at
-robbery as the newly born.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meantime, in French fashion, the President
-of the Court—a robust old man with a white
-beard and a red face, like a neatly trimmed
-Father Christmas—after reading the act of accusation,
-was the first to tackle and brow-beat
-our unfortunate friend. To do him justice,
-Teddy kept beautifully cool (he says now he
-recognized me and my wink through the disguise,
-and knew he was safe) and answered nothing
-through his puffed mouth but <span class='it'>Nong!</span> and <span class='it'>Jammy!</span>
-Every now and then the President, in
-the politest manner in the world, observed,
-“<span class='it'>Vous mentez, jeune homme!</span>” or “<span class='it'>C’est faux!</span>”
-while the judge on his right, a battered little
-man with blue glasses and his mouth all fallen
-in, ejaculated “<span class='it'>Quelle effronterie!</span>” or “<span class='it'>C’est
-abominable!</span>” at intervals.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As a matter of fact, the evidence against him
-(according to our English notions, at any rate)
-was far from strong. There were croupiers
-present ready to swear to having seen him in
-the rooms, charging down on the tables with a
-revolver; there were the men from the door to
-swear they had noticed him rush past; and there
-were the firemen who had found him crawling
-away behind the signal-box, down on the line,
-after we had got clear away. Very good. But
-the cactus had, for the present, so disfigured
-him, that an adroit cross-examination could not
-fail very much to shake them, and that, no
-doubt, the President felt; for, after wrangling
-with Teddy for some time, and receiving nothing
-but an eruption of <span class='it'>Nongs</span> and <span class='it'>Jammys</span> for his
-pains, he ill-temperedly cried identification would
-be useless and unfair with the accused’s face in
-its present condition, and that, until the swelling
-disappeared, he should remand him; by which
-time, he sardonically added, he had no doubt
-the other malefactors would be before him in a
-row.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Teddy gave me a piteous glance, and, nerving
-myself, I nudged our barrister, whom all along I
-had been coaching, and up he got.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, most fortunately, when poor Teddy was
-caught, neither revolver nor spoil were found on
-him; spoil he had never had, and the revolver,
-after the final discharge, he had hurled over the
-embankment into the sea. And he had always
-told the same story: that he had truly enough
-been in the rooms, but had nothing whatever to
-do with the robbery, having been forced out in
-the disturbance, and run as the others had;
-running, in his alarm, he knew not where, until
-he fell down the steps, lost his senses, and, coming
-to, found himself in the hands of the police.
-He was a quiet, respectable young Englishman,
-he declared, come to Monte Carlo for his health,
-and staying with his aunt at the hotel “Monopôle,”
-to whom (as I thought) he had early despatched
-a note, announcing himself as her nephew
-and in trouble, and imploring help.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And here we were to claim him, after so unpleasant
-an experience, Milor and Madame Ving-ham—so
-the barrister announced us!—persons
-of the highest consideration and wealth, constant
-visitors on the shores of the hospitable
-Riviera; in short, this, that, and the other, all
-couched in the finest language, and none of it
-in the least true. And then, in a final peroration,
-amid murmurs of sympathy, culminating
-in a burst of applause, the barrister threw up
-his fat hands, and invoked justice, mercy, and
-international law (not to mention the hospitality
-of old Greece and Rome), and, sitting down,
-wiped his forehead with the sleeve of his gown;
-while Madame Ving-ham judiciously lifted up
-her troubled voice, and wept louder than ever.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When the emotion had subsided, the President
-called me forward, and for the second time
-that morning my unlucky resemblance to another
-gentleman (a nobleman, by-the-way, as it
-turned out) was likely to get me into further
-trouble; for in me, Vincent Blacker, disguised
-as an old boy of sixty, the President imagined
-he recognized, just as my club friend had done
-an hour before, a distinguished guest he had
-met the previous evening at the Prince’s table;
-with whom he had held an improving discussion
-as to the present unsatisfactory condition of the
-British House of Lords, and the best method of
-amending, without destroying it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Comment, Milor!</span>” he cried, in astonishment,
-looking at me over his glasses; “<span class='it'>c’est votre Seigneurie?</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Good Lord, I said to myself, here we are again—giving
-the old man a polite but alarmed bow
-and smile.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the President knew me as Milor B., he
-ventured to observe (I really don’t quite like to
-give the illustrious name), and here was our advocate
-announcing me as some one else!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I hastened to explain, with perspiration on my
-brow, that Ving-ham was my second title, and in
-an unfortunate affair of this kind—<span class='it'>Cour d’Assises</span>,
-in short—I did not care for my first to be
-publicly mixed up.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The President bowed and said that was well
-understood, and then he proceeded to put me
-a few exceedingly polite and fatuous questions
-about Teddy, who, as a contrite nephew cut to
-the heart at so unfortunately dragging an old
-and honored name through the purlieus of the
-criminal law, was acting his part to perfection.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yes, monsieur was my nephew, of a character
-gentle and affectionate; of retiring habits and
-delicate health, a little <span class='it'>poitrinaire</span>, in fact (at
-which Teddy, comprehending, coughed with unnecessary
-violence), but all that was of obedient,
-tractable, and good. He had gone down to the
-Casino, while we, my wife and I—Madame Ving-ham
-still weeping—had gone to bed, believing
-he was in his room; and the next we had heard
-was early that morning, when we received a note
-from him announcing the unfortunate capture
-and mistake. <span class='it'>Monsieur le Président</span> would readily
-understand what of grief and desolation?—my
-affectionate uncle’s voice, with a touch of
-an only nephew in it, trembled, and madame
-shook convulsively as, still grasping my arm
-tight, she moaned and sobbed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That was more than enough. In a very few
-minutes, after a brief consultation among the
-judges, Teddy was released and dramatically
-embracing us in the body of the court—thereby
-nearly bringing off my left whisker—and I was
-paying our eloquent counsel. Before I left the
-yacht I had providentially provided myself with
-a bundle of notes from the heap of spoil on the
-table, and one of them—for a thousand francs—I
-presented to the astonished and gratified barrister.
-I trembled to think how much more than
-ever for the next few days he would reek of his
-favorite <span class='it'>ail</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Out went Mrs. Wingham, arm in arm with
-Teddy, and I followed, after declining the President’s
-kind invitation to breakfast with him, on
-the score of my overwrought feelings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Just as I was going down the steps a man I
-recognized as a croupier touched me respectfully
-on the arm, with a crafty, meridional smile. I
-stopped in some alarm, thinking it possible I was
-discovered. What did he want? Why, Milor
-no doubt remembered that lady whom Milor
-had commissioned the croupier to find out all
-about and let him know? Perfectly, I replied,
-with stiff and aristocratic upper lip. What had
-he discovered?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was an Italian, one Madame Vagliano,
-and she lived at the Villa des Genets, above the
-Condamine. He was proceeding with more information,
-when I haughtily cut him short with
-“<span class='it'>C’est bien! assez! voici madame qui nous observe</span>,”
-and handing him a note, which I afterwards
-discovered was unfortunately one of a
-thousand francs instead of, as I meant, a hundred,
-I hurried to the foot of the steps, where
-madame and Teddy were awaiting me. <span class='it'>Ce
-scélèrat de Lord B.!</span> I have really a good mind
-to give his illustrious name, after all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We walked on a little way in silence, and then
-Mrs. Wingham said, with traces of tearfulness:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What are you two villains going to do now?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bolt!” I replied, laconically.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And where’s my poor brother James all this
-time?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s all right, enjoying himself first-rate,
-sailing about somewhere in the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span>?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A well-appointed steam-yacht, belonging to
-a friend of ours.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You thieving wretches! You’ve been and
-decoyed him on board, you know you ’ave.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, he’s perfectly safe, wherever he is.
-Come along, Teddy, there’s no time to be lost.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But I can’t go like this,” cried Teddy. “I
-haven’t even got a hat, and all my clothes are
-on the yacht.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We bought him a dreadful French straw-hat
-up in Monaco, and then we jumped into a carriage
-and drove down to the tailor’s, next the
-“Grand Hotel.” As we drove, I questioned Mrs.
-Wingham as to what was known and said in the
-town about our escapade.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why,” said Mrs. Wingham, “people have
-been terribly frightened, and are beginning to
-leave the place.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good! And what line are the authorities
-taking?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They are denying it all, right and left, but
-they are determined to catch you, all the same.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They can’t do both!” I coldly replied.
-“They’d much better put up with their loss;
-we shall put the money to much better use than
-they could ever have done. If they are going to
-make themselves unpleasant over it, you may tell
-them from me we’ll come back and do precisely
-the same thing next year.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You impudent young feller!” cried the angry
-old woman, “you forget that one of the sharpest
-detectives in England is after you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s taking a mighty circuitous route!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But he’ll catch you, all the same, at last.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Will he?” I answered, eying her with cold
-amusement. “Now look here, missus, if you say
-much more I’ll communicate with Van Ginkel, and
-direct him to take the yacht across to Cuba and
-have James landed and shot there as a filibuster.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whereupon the poor old soul fell to whimpering
-again, though at the same time she couldn’t
-help laughing a little at my readiness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Teddy was soon fitted out at the tailor’s, and
-a sight he looked in what they called the <span class='it'>dernier
-cri</span> of a French travelling costume; more like a
-young man out of the <span class='it'>Petit Journal pour rire</span>
-than anything.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Adieu, Madame Ving-ham!” I laughed, as
-we got outside. “Your nephew and I are going
-to get bicycles and be off down the Corniche,
-over the Italian frontier. Say good-bye to him,
-and be off home to Brixton yourself as soon as
-possible, or you may get into trouble with the
-police here for using a false title of nobility.
-Now, you did, you know! it’s no use your denying
-it. Take my advice; the quieter you keep
-for the next few months the better.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was so angry she wouldn’t say good-bye to
-me, but she overwhelmed poor Parsons. And
-she implored him as soon as possible to give up
-my desperate bad company, which, sooner or
-later, could only bring him to ruin—I, if you
-please, who at so much risk had just rescued
-him!—and to write to her soon to Brixton, and
-come and see her directly he got back.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She stood watching us as we went off to the
-bicycle man’s in the Arcade, near Ciro’s, and
-kept on waving her handkerchief till we got into
-the gardens across the road and were lost to
-view.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now let this be a lesson to you, my son,” I
-sagely observed, as we hurried along, “always to
-make yourself pleasant and polite to old ladies.
-But for Mrs. Wingham, you might have been
-dragging a cannon-ball at your ankle for years.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Teddy shuddered, and said:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What a blessing I resembled her nephew!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And mine!” I added. “Don’t forget me.”</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p202'>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-OUR FLIGHT TO VENICE—THENCE TO ATHENS—WE ALL
-MEET ON THE ACROPOLIS—REAPPEARANCE OF MR.
-BAILEY THOMPSON!—AGAIN WE MANAGE TO PUT HIM
-OFF THE SCENT
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Of</span> our flight down the Corniche and across
-the Italian frontier I do not propose to say
-much. Suffice it that, at a quiet spot before we
-reached Mentone, I found the opportunity to
-strip off my disguise and, for precaution’s sake,
-bury both wig and whiskers at the root of an
-olive-tree; where no doubt they still remain, if
-any one cares to go and look for them. In well
-under the hour, so fast we travelled, we were
-over the Italian border, just beyond Mentone,
-and, after the usual difficulties with the <span class='it'>dogana</span>
-about our bicycles, were before very long safely
-seated in the Ventimiglia train for Turin. To
-avoid being further troubled with the machines,
-we presented them to a couple of porters, and,
-while waiting for the train, passed a highly
-amusing half-hour watching them trying to learn
-to ride.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Our point was Venice, and, travelling all night,
-on the afternoon of the next day (Sunday, January
-19th) Teddy and I were glad to find ourselves
-in a gondola, flapping along to the “Grand
-Hotel,” where we were all to meet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But at the “Grand” there was a telegram
-awaiting me: “<span class='it'>Come Athens—Brentin.</span>” It had
-been sent from Messina the previous afternoon,
-and, disagreeable though it was, there was nothing
-for it but to obey.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We went off at once to Cook’s offices in the
-Piazza to inquire about a steamer; but, being
-Sunday, of course found them closed. Very
-awkward! Surely, nowadays, when they open
-the museums, Mr. Cook might stretch a point
-and do the same with his offices?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What on earth were we to do? It was evident
-they didn’t care about receiving us at the hotel;
-I was exceedingly dirty, with the remains of the
-spirit-gum on my cheeks and the lines of the old-age
-pencil alongside my nose; and poor Teddy’s
-puffs and scars were all the more noticeable
-now they were just beginning to heal. We
-looked, in short, like a couple of broken-down
-sea-side entertainers, who had had a row at the
-last hall about returning the money. We had no
-luggage, not even a sponge-bag, and I had talked
-grandly about the yacht until I found the telegram,
-when I had to admit it wasn’t coming; at
-which the manager had merely bowed with sour
-and silent politeness. “Then you don’t stay
-here!” I read as plainly as possible in his watchful
-eye.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We went on down to the Piazzetta, to the harbor
-side, to see if we could by chance hear of a
-vessel sailing for Athens.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” grumbled Teddy, “and when we get
-to Athens we shall find another wire, with
-‘<span class='it'>Come Timbuctoo!</span>’ Let’s cut it short and go
-home by rail. I don’t feel safe in these foreign
-parts. Oh, how glad I shall be to get back to
-Southport again!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Strolling up and down Lord Street, eh? in
-those eternal breeches and gaiters.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, why not? Come, let’s be off. I don’t
-know why we need follow them half over Europe.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Certainly, let’s be off,” said I, “if you don’t
-mind paying for the tickets.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, you don’t mean to say you haven’t got
-enough money?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was true, I hadn’t. What with the thousand
-francs for the defence, the thousand for
-the croupier who told me about Madame Vagliano
-(what the deuce did I care about Madame
-Vagliano!), the buying of the bicycles, the clothes
-for Teddy, the tickets, and one thing and another,
-I had only two or three hundred francs left;
-and Teddy had merely a couple of louis, having
-spent the rest in bribing the Monte Carlo police
-to carry his letter to Mrs. Wingham and put him
-in a better cell.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nothing, I think, tries a man’s nature more
-truly than travelling and the contretemps arising
-therefrom; nothing more surely discovers
-his selfishness, his meanness, his want of even
-temper. We were certainly rather in a fix, but
-scarcely to warrant Teddy’s outburst of anger and
-ill-humor. If I was amused at it all and kept
-my equanimity, why couldn’t he? But no! he
-kept on fuming and fretting to such a degree
-that I was within an ace of decoying him up a
-piccolo canal and beating him soundly about the
-head and ears, so much did he grate upon my
-nerves.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last we did manage to secure passages in a
-dirty Italian boat, <span class='it'>Il Principe Umberto</span>, sailing
-that night down the coast to Ancona and Brindisi,
-and thence across the Adriatic, <span class='it'>viâ</span> Corfu,
-to Patras. It was rather a tight fit, financially
-speaking, for after paying for our berths and allowing
-something for food on board, we had only
-just about enough left for the tickets from Patras
-to Athens. If the yacht didn’t turn up there,
-then we should be in a fix indeed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We went back to the hotel, and, ordering dinner,
-spent the time till it was ready in the reading-room.
-There were no London papers, of
-course, of Saturday’s date, but there were plenty
-of French and Italian. Most of them had a paragraph
-about us and our doings, very guardedly
-expressed. None of them went further than
-merely saying there had been an audacious attempt
-at robbery in the rooms at Monte Carlo
-on Friday night, and much excitement in consequence;
-but without exception they hastened
-to add that all connected with it were in the
-hands of the police, tranquillity reigned, and play
-was going on as usual. Teddy and I pointed
-each other out the paragraphs as we found them,
-and chuckled over them amazingly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Over the voyage I draw a veil; enough that it
-was exceedingly rough and uncomfortable, and we
-were both very unwell, as somehow one always
-is if one has to go second class. My only consolation
-lay in occasionally seeing an extremely good-looking
-Italian stewardess, who looked in on us
-every now and then, and sympathetically said
-“<span class='it'>Male?</span>” I never answered her; I don’t know
-a word of Italian, and I couldn’t have said it if
-I had; but it was something occasionally to see
-her fine, serious, handsome face, shining in over
-our deathliness like a star.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At Corfu we managed to drag ourselves ashore
-for a couple of hours, and mooned about arm-in-arm,
-in unsteady rapture at the warmth and sunshine.
-At the hotel where we lunched we found
-the English papers. One of them (that hebetated
-old ——, I think it was) had “Extraordinary
-Story from Monte Carlo” among its foreign
-intelligence—just a few lines, to say an attempt
-had been made by some Americans to raid the
-rooms, that it had been completely frustrated, so
-far as plunder was concerned, but the desperadoes
-had got clear away in a yacht known as the <span class='it'>Saratoga</span>.
-And that, so far as I could ever afterwards
-learn, was the only reference to our affair in the
-whole of the English press.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As for the <span class='it'>New York Guardian</span>, they declared
-the thieves were all English, many of them well-known
-in New York, where the season before they
-had masqueraded as peers and peers’ sons, and
-some of them nearly succeeded in marrying prominent
-and wealthy society young ladies. Really,
-when one happens to be a little behind the
-scenes, one is amazed at the pompous inaccuracy
-of much of the information in the newspapers.
-But, on the whole, I thought it wisest not to
-write and attempt to put them straight.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the Wednesday morning, early, we reached
-Patras, and were in Athens soon after six. We
-drove up to the best hotel, but there was no news
-whatever of the yacht. We had been so unwell,
-for after leaving Corfu it again became fearfully
-rough, we looked more disreputable than ever.
-It was no time, however, to be scrupulous, and
-I carried matters with such a high hand, and was
-so dissatisfied and overbearing, we soon got rooms,
-dined, and went to bed. I have always noticed,
-by-the-way, that if you are rude and give yourself
-airs of importance, even without luggage,
-you can generally get what you want in the way of
-accommodation. Most people think you wouldn’t
-swagger or be insolent unless you were really
-somebody, and either get out of the way and let
-you take what you want, or give it you, bent
-double with obsequiousness. But, then, most
-people are fools. So Teddy and I got two of the
-best bedrooms, after totally refusing others, and
-slept in them with great comfort and soundness;
-though all the money we had between us was
-seven francs fifty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next morning, soon after breakfast, we went
-up to the Acropolis. From my school-days I
-knew it commanded a fine view, and hoped from
-thence soon to descry the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>’Οιμοι! there wasn’t a sign of her. We could
-look right down into the harbor of the Piræus,
-three or four miles away, and the only occupants
-were a Greek man-of-war and a couple of trading
-brigs. To comfort Teddy, I pointed him out
-various famous islands—Salamis and Aegina, and
-so forth—telling him such stories from Greek
-history as I could remember, or partially invent.
-In the Acropolis itself, wandering among the
-splendid and touching ruins, there wasn’t a soul
-but a dirty man, with large patches on his knees,
-gathering snails.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He follows the footsteps of Pericles, of Alcibiades,
-and of Solon,” I said, “and from their
-dim traces he gathers snails for soup. Such, my
-dear Teddy,” I added, tranquilly, “is all the history
-he knows. To him the Acropolis is nothing
-but a hunting-ground for snails.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re talking exactly like Mr. Barlow!” replied
-Teddy, with a dissatisfied snort.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the afternoon we again set out for the Acropolis.
-At the bottom of the sacred ascent a couple
-of carriages were waiting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It can scarcely be they,” I said. “They
-would come round and try all the hotels first,
-surely.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, a man like Brentin would do anything!”
-Teddy cried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I looked into the first carriage, and soon recognized
-a little, rather old, cloak Lucy used to
-wear, with a high Medici collar. She never had
-much money for her clothes, poor child, and was
-apt to be a little behind the fashions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s really they, Teddy,” I said. “Come along
-and we’ll give them a fright. They deserve it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They do, indeed!” shouted Teddy, scarlet
-with rage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We peeped in cautiously at the entrance, and
-there they were. We could see them all crossing
-from the Parthenon towards the Erechtheum,
-headed by that toad Brentin. We let them get
-well inside the walls of the beautiful little temple,
-and then we went quickly across to the left towards
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Just as we got up to the white marble walls, I
-pushed Teddy and said, “Hide.” Then I went
-on in alone. Brentin was just saying, “This is
-apparently the Erechtheum. There’s mighty
-little of it left; why don’t they put it straight,
-anyway?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You should just have seen their faces when
-they turned and saw me. Lucy, who was looking
-very pale, ran tottering towards me with a
-little cry, and nearly fainted in my arms. My
-sister followed, and was soon on my other shoulder.
-Miss Rybot waved her parasol, Forsyth
-and Hines cheered, and Arthur Masters gave a
-loud <span class='it'>gone away</span>! All Brentin said was, with rather
-a forced smile, “Well, all right, eh? Here
-you are. You got my telegram?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We sat down on the fallen blocks of marble,
-and everybody began talking at once. Where
-was Teddy, they asked, and why wasn’t he with
-me? Had he really been caught, or had he, after
-all, run straight away home in his fright?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As if trying to avoid a painful subject, “Why
-didn’t you come to Venice, as we arranged?” I
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We heard the French corvette was somewhere
-up in those waters,” Brentin replied, “and thought
-it safer not. We should have come to look for
-you here <span class='it'>at</span> once, only we calculated you couldn’t
-possibly arrive till to-morrow. But what about
-Parsons? What’s the matter with your telling
-us all about Parsons?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Poor Teddy!” I sighed, and everybody looked
-shocked. I had scarcely made up my mind whether
-to say he was dead, or in prison for life, when
-Teddy himself suddenly fell in among us on his
-hands and knees. He looked so ghastly, with
-his white face and red cactus scars—to say nothing
-of his extraordinary way of entering—that
-the ladies began to scream, and Bob Hines fell
-over backward.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Teddy!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hush! Hush! Hush!” hissed Teddy.
-“Bailey Thompson!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Im-pawsible,” snarled Brentin. “He’s in
-Minorca.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I say it’s Bailey Thompson. I saw him from
-outside, just coming in.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Alone?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes. Keep quiet!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We all huddled close together and kept as still
-as death.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I couldn’t be mistaken,” Teddy whispered.
-“He’s got on the same clothes and carrying the
-shawl, and he was looking about him, just as he
-used at Monte Carlo.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You don’t say!” said Brentin, looking scared.
-“What the plague is he doing in Athens? We
-shall have all our trouble over again.” And
-then, thinking he was not very polite, he added,
-“And how are you? All right?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No thanks to you!” grunted Teddy, at which
-the unfeeling Brentin began to chuckle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Somebody’s scratched your face well for you,”
-he laughed. “Looks like marriage lines!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We lay very still, hoping against hope Thompson
-wouldn’t think the Erechtheum worth a visit;
-but the fact was he had looked in the carriages
-outside and questioned the driver, and, from the
-cloaks and what the man had said, made up his
-mind it was our party. So, after peeping in at
-the Parthenon, he came straight across; we heard
-his footsteps, the divisional tread, closer and
-closer. Then he tumbled over a column, swore,
-and the next moment was inside surveying us,
-huddled together like a covey of partridges,
-with an expression I don’t find it at all easy
-to describe—it was such a mixture of everything.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Poor creature, he had evidently suffered! His
-face was drawn, his beard unshaved, and his forlorn
-eyes looked defiantly out from under a
-heavily lined brow. His mouth was tight and
-grim, and yet about the compressed lips there
-was an air of satisfaction, almost of unholy
-mirth. When he saw us, ran his glance over us
-and noted we were all there, netted for the
-fowler, flame leaped to his sombre eyes. There
-was dead silence while he stepped majestically,
-solemnly forward, threw his plaid shawl on a
-column, and unbuttoned his dusty frock-coat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And how are you?” said Brentin, coolly.
-“Come to see over the Acropolis?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thompson glared at him, and without replying
-sat down on his shawl.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How did you get here? Had a good voyage?
-Sakes alive, man, what a hole in your boot!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Poor man!” whispered Lucy, “how fearfully
-tired and ill he looks.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At so unexpected an expression of sympathy,
-the detective’s expression suddenly changed.
-Poor wretch, he was worn out, hungry, and depressed;
-humiliated and miserable, I suppose,
-at being so egregiously outwitted; for his lip
-trembled, and, putting his face in his dog-skin
-hands, he actually began to cry. I never felt so
-ashamed of myself, so sorry for a man, in my
-life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Cry, baby, cry!” taunted Brentin. “Serve
-you thundering well right—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Be quiet!” I sternly cried. Brentin scowled
-at me, while poor Thompson began to search
-with blinking eyes for his handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I went on, with real feeling in my
-voice:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We are sorry, Mr. Thompson, for the way
-we have treated you, but you must see there was
-no other course open to us. We were entirely
-frank with you, but you were never frank with
-us. We discovered your identity quite by accident,
-and took the advantage we thought our
-due of the discovery.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, all right, sir, thank you!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“At any rate,” struck in the irrepressible
-Brentin, with a wink at me, “you have the satisfaction
-of knowing you spoiled a fine piece of
-work, which will now, I guess, be consummated
-by other more imperfect hands than ours.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What!” said the detective, brightening.
-“You never even made the attempt?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What do you take us for?” cried the ingenious
-and evasive Brentin. “Make an attempt
-of that nature, with the sharpest detective in
-old England on our heels? No, sir!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thompson looked pleased, and then, with sly
-malice, observed:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But, after all, gentlemen, you might have
-done it with perfect safety.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“With the most perfect safety, I assure you.
-I had not yet communicated with the Monte
-Carlo police.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That so? But afterwards?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, afterwards, I should have pinched you
-all, of course!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There you are!” cried Brentin; “we knew
-that, mighty well. No, sir! There are no
-flies on us. You gave us a fright, Mr. Bailey
-Thompson, and we, I guess, have given you one.
-But no real damage has been done to either
-party. Let us cry quits. Your hand, sir!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The simple fellow shook his hand obediently,
-and, polite as ever, bowed to the ladies. My sister
-he already knew. She smiled at him and said:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But how on earth have you got here, Mr.
-Bailey Thompson? We all understood you were
-going to the Balearic Isles.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I know nothing of my original destination,
-madam,” the detective replied. “I only know
-that after steaming for some few hours in one
-direction, Mr. Van Ginkel suddenly bouted ship
-and went full speed in the other.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But why, I wonder?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Some matter, I understood from the captain,
-connected with his divorced wife.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Princess Danleno,” said Brentin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Some such name. She had left Cannes and
-gone to San Remo, and Mr. Van Ginkel was
-anxious to see her and effect a reconciliation, so
-the captain told me. He is full of caprice, like
-all invalids, and on the caprice seizing him he
-simply bouted ship without a word. But first
-he had to get rid of me; so he carried me, full
-speed ahead, to the southernmost point of
-Greece—somewhere near Cape Colonna, I believe—and
-there he carted me ashore, gentlemen,
-like a sack of coals.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The poor man’s lip began to tremble again,
-and he looked round our circle piteously for
-sympathy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dear! dear!” murmured Brentin; “how
-like him! And never said a word the whole
-time, I dare say?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not one! That was early on Monday morning.
-Since then I have been slowly making my
-way up the Morea with great difficulty and discomfort,
-mainly on foot, and sometimes getting
-a lift in a country wagon. At Nauplia I managed
-to secure a passage in a coasting steamer,
-which, after a tempestuous voyage, has just landed
-me at the Piræus. There I saw your yacht,
-gentlemen, and knew, of course, you were in the
-neighborhood.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How did you manage about the language in
-the Peloponnese?” asked Hines, curiously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, fortunately, I can draw a little,” replied
-the detective, who was every moment recovering
-his spirits, “and anything I wanted I drew.
-But, often as I drew a beefsteak or a chop, gentlemen,”
-he said, plaintively, “I never got it.
-Nothing but eggs and a sort of polenta, and once—only
-once—goat’s flesh, when I drew a bedstead,
-in token that I wanted to sleep there.
-And the fleas, gentlemen, the fleas!” he cried.
-“There is a large Greek flea—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Never mind that just now,” said Brentin,
-gravely. “There are elegant and refined ladies
-present. The essential is you are safe, and bear
-us all no malice. That is so, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“None in the world!” cried the good fellow.
-“But I shall be much obliged if you will give
-me directions how to get home from the Acropolis
-in Athens to Brixton. I have no money to
-speak of, and a large hole in my right boot.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That will be all right, sir,” said Brentin,
-rising, with his grand air. “Henceforth you
-are our guest. By-gones are by-gones, and we
-will look after you till you are safely landed at
-Charing Cross.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thence, by tram or ’bus, over Westminster
-Bridge,” murmured Hines, as we all rose, shook
-ourselves, and prepared to descend.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, all’s well that ends well,” cried Thompson.
-“But, all the same, I rather regret, for all
-our sakes, the Monte Carlo business was left
-untried.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Some other day, sir,” said Brentin; “some
-other day, when you are enjoying your well-earned
-retirement, and an officer not quite so plaguy
-sharp is in your place.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The pleased detective walked jauntily on in
-front with the rest, while Brentin, my sister, and
-I followed, Lucy clinging fondly to my arm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But what are you going to do with him?” I
-whispered. “It is ingenious to let him suppose
-the thing has not been done; but once he gets
-on board the yacht he’s bound to discover all,
-and that he’s been fooled again. Then it will
-be all up, indeed!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Some of you must take him home overland,
-on the pretence there isn’t room for every one on
-the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But he must find it all out directly he gets
-to England, mustn’t he?” said Lucy, softly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I hope to goodness he won’t come trooping
-over to Medworth Square,” my sister observed.
-“I shall never hear the last of it from Frank.
-And, after all, I’ve done nothing, have I?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“True, O queen!” muttered Brentin, knitting
-his brows. “But by the time he gets back
-the scent will be fairly cold. And the Casino
-authorities are taking the sensible course of
-ignoring the whole affair. That is so, isn’t it?
-No doubt, you’ve seen the papers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yes, I said, I had, and that was their line.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There you are, then! For the rest, we
-must simply trust our luck. It has stood by us
-pretty well so far. Oh, and, by-the-way, what
-about Mr. Parsons? How did you manage to
-get him out?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I rapidly sketched my part in the affair, and
-made them all laugh amazingly as I told them
-of my disguise and its accidental resemblance to
-Lord B.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Whether we are drunken men or fools,”
-laughed Brentin, “I know not; but Providence
-has certainly looked after us so far in a way
-that I may fairly call the most favored nation
-clause.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Quoti moris minus est, eo minus est periculi!</span>”
-I quoted, somehow happening to remember the
-sentence from my old Latin grammar. “Which
-is the Latin, ladies, for ‘Where there is the less
-fear, there is the less danger.’ ”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lucy pressed my arm and smiled happily.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Just as we neared the carriages:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“By-the-way,” I asked, “what did it all tote
-up to?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The boodle?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Just over one million four hundred and fifty
-thousand francs; roughly speaking, fifty-eight
-thousand pounds of your money.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ll be back in Wharton Park, dearest,” I
-whispered, “before the swallow dares!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She pressed my arm again and smiled more
-happily than ever.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The only thing that troubles me,” said my
-sister, “is how on earth I am to establish an
-<span class='it'>alibi</span> to Frank’s satisfaction, in case there’s a
-rumpus when we get back.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Alibis</span> are old-fashioned nowadays,” I answered.
-“We shall have to think of something
-else for you than an <span class='it'>alibi</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The unsuspicious Bailey Thompson was standing
-at one of the carriage doors in a dandified
-attitude, making himself agreeable to Miss
-Rybot.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we drove away he again said—for after all
-he was human and meant to be malicious—“But
-I do really wonder you didn’t do it, gentlemen,
-after all!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t torture us with remorse, Mr. Bailey
-Thompson, sir,” Brentin cried; “the sense of
-neglected opportunity is hard to bear.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, all I can say is, I never saw an easier
-bit of work in my life, and in my absence you
-were really perfectly safe. Those French police
-are such utter fools, and as likely as not the
-Casino people would have let you off. Come,
-now, confess! Don’t you regret it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sir,” said Brentin, loftily, “I regret nothing,
-and never did. All is for the best in the
-best of all possible worlds.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And the good detective couldn’t understand
-why, a few moments later, Brentin was seized
-with a great roar of laughter. He explained it
-was from seeing “Κοῦκ” in Greek letters over
-Cook’s offices; it looked so droll! We all
-laughed heartily, too, and so drove up in immense
-mirth and spirits to our hotel.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p219'>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-WE ARRIVE SAFE IN LONDON AND GO TO MEDWORTH
-SQUARE—BACK AT “THE FRENCH HORN”—NEWS AT
-LAST OF THE <span class='it'>AMARANTH</span>—I INTERVIEW MR. CRAGE AND
-FIND HIM ILL
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Very</span> little remains to tell; but that little is
-of importance. Of our journey home together
-(my sister, Lucy, Bailey Thompson, Parsons, and
-I, the others sailing on board the yacht) I need
-say nothing, for it was entirely pleasant and
-uneventful. Our luggage wasn’t even robbed
-on the Italian lines; we felt the cold somewhat
-as we neared home, and that was all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At Charing Cross Thompson was evidently
-well-known to the officials; he proclaimed us all
-his friends and above suspicion, so our portmanteaus
-were barely looked at; everybody touched
-their hats to him, and we felt quite royal in our
-immunities.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There we parted. Teddy jumped into a cab
-for Euston, to catch the night express for his
-dear Southport; my sister, Lucy, and I went off
-in a four-wheeler to Medworth Square; while
-the still unsuspicious Thompson remained on
-the platform, bowing and smiling. Once safely
-landed at Charing Cross, our duty to him was
-plainly at an end. No doubt he would immediately
-go off to Brixton, find his sister, Mrs.
-Wingham, and learn the truth; but what that
-might mean to us I really neither knew nor
-cared. We had so far so brilliantly succeeded
-that readers must not blame me if I continued
-obstinately optimistic, and believed, whatever
-trouble might still be in store for us, we should
-certainly somehow emerge from it scathless and
-joyous.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I hope,” my sister said, as we drove away,
-“he won’t think it rude of me not asking him to
-come and call. After all, he’s not quite of our
-world, and he would need such a deal of explaining,
-for Frank always insists on knowing exactly
-who everybody is.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He won’t think of coming of his own accord,
-I suppose?” whispered Lucy. “And, oh! I do
-so wish he wasn’t a friend of Mr. Crage’s.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Lor’ bless you!” I philosophically remarked,
-“it’s even money we none of us ever see or hear
-of him again.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But we did, that day week exactly, when he
-turned up at “The French Horn,” purple with
-ineffective rage, accompanied by his dazed French
-<span class='it'>confrère</span>, Monsieur Cochefort.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In Medworth Square all was as usual. The
-Thursday evening German band was playing the
-usual selection from that tiresome old “Mikado,”
-and my sweet niece Mollie was soon tearing
-down the stairs to welcome us.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She watch for you every night, ma’am,” her
-Welsh nurse said; “and last night she go down-stairs
-her best, and blow up Mr. Blyth like anything
-for doing a door-bell ring exactly like
-yours, ma’am.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My brother-in-law was very glad to get his
-wife back, and, having been warned by letter,
-welcomed my dear Lucy with sufficient warmth.
-How could he help it? Everywhere she went
-she won all hearts. Brentin and Parsons both
-admired her desperately, and Bob Hines, my
-sister told me, paid her more attention on the
-yacht coming from Monte Carlo than he had
-ever been known to pay any one before.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Even Forsyth, who is one of the most <span class='it'>difficile</span>
-men I know (unless the young lady makes a dead
-set at him, when he thinks her lovely), even he
-said to me, “That’s a real pretty girl, Vincent,
-and you’re a very lucky man to get her;” while
-Miss Rybot once quite surprised me by the
-warmth of her congratulation. “She’s so fresh
-and unaffected, Mr. Blacker,” she said. “She’s
-like a breeze that meets you at the end of a
-country lane when you come suddenly upon the
-sea.” Which I thought both poetical and perfectly
-true—rather a rare combination nowadays.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next morning Lucy and I were off to Liverpool
-Street for Nesshaven and “The French
-Horn.” As we drove up, and I saw the familiar
-place once more, blinking in the soft February
-sunshine, just as we had left it, I could scarcely
-believe all I had gone through in the way of
-peril and adventure. Somehow, if one leaves a
-place for a time, and has experiences of moment
-in the interval, one expects those experiences to
-have had their effect elsewhere, too, even on inanimate
-objects.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I felt older, wiser, more developed, more of a
-man, and I was astonished to find the place quite
-unaltered and Mr. Thatcher looking just the
-same as he came running out in his dirty old
-blazer. His mother was at the window, gazing
-through the panes with the naïve curiosity of a
-child at new arrivals. She kissed Lucy, and said
-to me: “Well, here you are back safe, you bad
-young man. You’ve given us a rare fright, I can
-tell you”—and that was all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That same evening, when the ladies were safely
-abed, I had a long talk with Mr. Thatcher in
-the bar parlor. After dear Lucy’s escapade, we
-decided we might as well be married at once,
-without waiting for Easter; and that, with the
-help of a license, the following Thursday, February
-6th, would be none too soon. For myself,
-apart from other considerations, I thought it
-clearly wisest to get married and clear out of the
-country, on a lengthy wedding-tour, as quick as
-we could; so that, in case of search being made
-for me, as the head and guiding spirit of the
-raid, I might, for some few months at any rate,
-be <span class='it'>non inventus</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next, I delicately approached the subject of
-the repurchase of Wharton Park. I told Mr.
-Thatcher we had been extraordinarily lucky at
-Monte Carlo, and that, by a combination of rare
-circumstances, I was the richer by £30,000 than
-when I started. He was shrewd enough to listen
-in silence and ask no sort of question as to what
-particular system I had pursued to enable me to
-return with so large a sum. In fact, I scarcely
-gave him time to ask questions, I was so rapid,
-hurrying forward only to the main point, whether
-Crage’s offer were still open and we should
-still be able to get the old wretch out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He told me that since Crage’s last visit and
-offer to marry Lucy he had seen nothing of him,
-and, so far as he knew, the place was still to be
-had. We could, if I liked, go up to the house
-in a day or two and make inquiries cautiously, or
-write Crage a letter making him a formal proposal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To which I replied that, knowing something
-of human nature, I judged it best, when we made
-our offer, to be prepared with the actual sum in
-notes and gold to make it good; for, with a
-man like Crage, combined of malice and craft,
-he would most likely try to bluff and raise us unless
-he saw the very gold and notes before him,
-beyond which, not having any more to offer, we
-were not prepared to go.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Very true,” said Thatcher. “There’s nothing
-like the ready to tempt a man, as I know very
-well. Why, when I was in business—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then all we can do,” I continued, cutting
-him short, “is to wait in patience till the
-boodle—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The what?” said Thatcher, taking the pipe
-out of his mouth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s an American term—the money we have
-won, arrives. It’s coming in the yacht, and should
-be here in a day or two now. Then we’ll go up
-with it to the house, in a bag, and spread it out
-on the table—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And I shall be back in Wharton Park again!”
-cried Thatcher. “Gracious powers! Who would
-have thought it possible? And, of course, it will
-be settled on Lucy. Me for life, and then Lucy.
-How delighted my poor old mother will be!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” I said, “and that your name may be
-perpetuated, I will add it to my own. Father-in-law,
-here’s health and prosperity to those two
-fine old English families, the Thatcher-Blackers!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So there was nothing we could do but wait in
-patience for the arrival of the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>. It
-was tedious, anxious work, for though I never
-doubted all would be well, yet Bailey Thompson’s
-portentous silence somewhat alarmed me;
-and as the days passed, and neither he nor the
-yacht gave any sign of their existence, my nerves
-began to get unstrung, and I grew worn and irritable.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Fortunately, as often happens in the early
-days of February, the weather was beautifully
-fine; so fine that the more flatulent class of
-newspapers were full of letters from country
-correspondents, who were finding hedge-sparrows’
-eggs and raspberries in their gardens, and
-the usual Lincolnshire parson broke into jubilant
-twitterings over his dish of green pease.
-Otherwise, I don’t think I really could have
-borne it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last, late on the Tuesday evening, came a
-telegram from Brentin at Southampton—“<span class='it'>Safe,
-will arrive to-morrow</span>”—and I began to breathe
-a little easier. But not a word of any sort from
-Bailey Thompson, neither a reproach nor a
-threat; till I felt like that Damocles of Syracuse
-who, though seated on a throne, was yet
-immediately under a faintly suspended sword.
-For here was I, on a throne, indeed—the throne
-of dear Lucy’s pure and constant affection—and
-yet!—at any moment!—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dramatically enough, the sword fell on my very
-wedding morning—on its flat side, happily—giving
-me a shock, but no cut of any sort, as I am
-now briefly going to tell.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next morning came another telegram from
-Brentin in London, to say he would arrive at six
-and beg he might be met. All was well, he wired,
-adding “<span class='it'>Any news Thompson?</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wired back to the “Victoria” there was none:
-“<span class='it'>bring boodle with you</span>;” and then I went off and
-found Thatcher.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For always I had had the fancy to pay old
-Crage out of the place and be married on the
-same day, and here was now my chance. We
-were to be married in Nesshaven Church, in the
-grounds of Wharton Park, at twelve; what was
-to prevent us, I said to Thatcher, from walking
-on up to the house first with £30,000, completing
-the purchase, and hasting to the wedding afterwards?
-Thence back to “The French Horn”
-for a light lunch, afterwards catch the half-past-two
-train for Liverpool Street, and so to Folkestone
-in the evening.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was nothing to prevent it, said Thatcher,
-who for the last two days had gone about in a
-triumphant, bulging white waistcoat; only it
-would require rather delicate handling, all to be
-done successfully. Crage should be prepared,
-for instance, he thought; for, notwithstanding
-the sight of the money, the sight of dear Lucy
-in her happy wedding radiance might turn him
-sour, and he might after all refuse to complete.
-What was to prevent one of us, he said—meaning,
-of course, me—going up to the house and
-sounding the old man first? Then we should
-know exactly how we stood, and what chance
-there was of our money being accepted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, for the last week nothing had been seen
-of the old man, and rumors had reached us, chiefly
-through the gardener, he was very ill. He
-hadn’t been to church for more than a month,
-and at church he had always been a very regular
-attendant; not so much because he had any real
-religion in him as that he might aggravate the
-parson by catching him up loudly in the responses,
-and barking his way harshly through
-the hymns a good half-line behind the rest of
-the congregation. Indeed, the chief attraction,
-I fear, at Nesshaven Church was old Crage and
-his nauseous eccentricities, and people who had
-heard how he had once lighted up his pipe during
-the sermon and sat there sucking at it in the
-Wharton pew, came from miles round in the hope
-he would enliven the discourse by doing it again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nor had he been seen about the grounds, nor
-stumping down to the inn, as he mostly did once
-a week to insult the inmates; in short, the end
-that comes to us all—good, bad, and indifferent—was
-clearly coming now to him, and if business
-were ever to be done, it must be done speedily
-and at once.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So, before Brentin came, early on the Wednesday
-afternoon, I trudged alone up to the house.
-There wasn’t a sign of life in it, and when I rang
-at the hall door I heard the heavy bell clanging
-away down the empty passages and cold servants’
-quarters as in the depths of an Egyptian tomb.
-I rang and rang, until at last I heard shuffling
-footsteps approach. From the other side of the
-door came stertorous breathing and wheezing,
-and the undoing of a chain; then a burglar’s bell
-was taken off and fell with a jangle on the stone
-floor inside, and at last the door was pulled ajar.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Poor old Crage! He looked out at me with
-his wicked, frightened old face, pinched, haggard,
-unshaven, dirty; terror-struck, as though
-he feared, I were Death himself who had been
-knocking at the door. He was in his shirt and
-trousers and a frowzy old dressing-gown, and his
-bare, bony feet were thrust in worn leather slippers.
-As he breathed his throat rattled dismally,
-and his long hand, with the thick, muddy veins,
-shook so he couldn’t fold the dressing-gown
-round his gaunt, corded, bare throat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hullo, young cockney!” he croaked; “what’s
-to do?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How are you, Mr. Crage?” I asked, shocked
-at the old man’s fallen, forlorn look.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Very bad!” he whispered, his rheumy eyes
-blinking with watery self-pity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is there anybody looking after you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No—no—thieves! all thieves!—don’t want
-’em.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then he made as if he would shut the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I came up to see you on business,” I said;
-“about selling the house.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No business to-day,” he croaked. “Too ill.
-Come to-morrow—any time. Come to-morrow.”
-And with that he shut the door in my face.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I heard him shuffling away across the hall, kicking
-the fallen bell with a tinkle along the floor,
-and then, as I turned to go, I heard him fall and
-groan. I ran in hastily, and with great difficulty
-managed to get him on his feet again. He
-stood there for some few minutes, clutching me
-and rattling his throat; then, hanging on my
-arm, dragging me along with him, he paddled off
-down a short dark passage towards a half-open
-door, pushed it wide, and pulled me after him
-into the great empty drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The blinds were down, and the fading February
-sun gleamed in on the bare worn carpet.
-In front of the fine fireplace, with a little dying
-wood-fire in it, stood an arm-chair, with a small
-table beside it. A candle and snuffers were on
-it, and a plate of stale bread-and-butter. On the
-high mantel-piece was a medicine bottle, full and
-corked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He sank back into his chair, and lay there,
-breathing heavily, with his eyes closed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But is there nobody looking after you?” I
-asked, and he made some twitching movement
-with his fingers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Just at that moment in flounced the gardener’s
-wife, drying her hands on her apron. She was
-a big, handsome, shameless-looking creature,
-with a naming eye and a hard, high color on her
-stiff cheeks.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now you’ve been moving yourself about
-again!” she cried, bending over him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Crage opened his eyes and looked up at her
-maliciously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He came up on business,” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re a pretty man to do business, ain’t
-you?” she sneered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, not to-day,” he mocked. “Too ill. All
-right to-morrow. Tell the genelman to come
-to-morrow, early. Quite well to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turned to go, and Crage, raising himself in
-his chair, rasped out:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bring the money with you, young cockney,
-or no business. Mind that!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The woman followed me to the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Has he got a doctor?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Doctor Hall came once,” she said, “but he
-won’t do anything he tells him. He won’t take
-his medicine and he won’t go to bed. He says
-he’ll die if he goes to bed. He sleeps all night
-in that arm-chair in the drawing-room. If he
-don’t die soon, I shall; I know that very well.
-If you’ve got any business to do with him, you’d
-better come early in the morning. He can’t last
-much longer.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And with that she closed the door on me, and
-I heard her putting up the chain again and the
-burglar’s bell as I went away down the weedy
-gravel path.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p230'>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='summary'>
-ARRIVAL OF BRENTIN—MY WEDDING-DAY—WE GO TO
-WHARTON—BAILEY THOMPSON AND COCHEFORT FOLLOW
-US—WE FINALLY DEFEAT THEM BOTH
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Brentin</span> was in “The French Horn” by a
-quarter to seven, and, rather to my surprise, he
-came alone. I thought Hines or Masters would
-surely have come with him; but no, he said, except
-for Forsyth, they had all parted company at
-Southampton. Masters and Miss Rybot had
-gone to Sea View, where they were to be married
-almost immediately, and Hines had gone off to
-stay with a married sister at Bournemouth.
-Forsyth alone had travelled up to town with him,
-and then gone on straight to Colchester to take
-up his neglected regimental duties. So I wrote
-out a telegram to be sent first thing in the morning,
-begging him to come over and be my best
-man.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And the boodle? Brentin winked and, with
-his hands on his knees, began to laugh, like the
-priest in the <span class='it'>Bonne Histoire</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Some of it has melted, sir,” he joyously
-cried. “Your friend Hines has got his, and
-Mr. Parsons, by this time, is toying with ay registered
-letter way up in Southport. I have handsomely
-recompensed Captain Evans and the
-crew; they have, no doubt, been tanking-up and
-painting Portsmouth red all the time. I have
-reimbursed myself for the yacht and other trifles,
-and there now remains the £30,000 for your
-young lady’s ancestral home, and some £20,000
-for the hospitals and so on. To-morrow, sir, we
-will draw up a list of the most deserving of
-them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You have the money with you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” he said; it was all safe in what he
-called his grip, or hand-bag, and quite at my
-service. I told him of my desire to complete the
-purchase immediately before the marriage was
-solemnized, and then we fell to talking of Bailey
-Thompson and his strange silence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, the man is piqued, sir,” said Brentin;
-“that’s what he is, piqued. Beyond saying
-that, I do not propose to give him ay second
-thought. He is mad piqued, and that’s all there
-is to it!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So I tried to feel completely at my ease, and
-managed to spend a very happy evening in the
-bar parlor, Lucy playing to us and Brentin occasionally
-bursting into raucous song. Now, when
-I think of him, I like best to remember him as
-he was that evening, forgetting his harder, commoner
-side, when he so outrageously proposed to
-desert poor Teddy; even refusing (as I forgot at
-the time to mention) to allow the cannon to be
-brought into play for his rescue by shelling the
-rooms. He was infinitely gay and amusing, only
-finishing up the evening, after dear Lucy’s retirement,
-with a long and violent dispute with
-Mr. Thatcher on the vague subject of the immortality
-of the soul. Thatcher believed he had
-a soul and would live forever, in another, happier
-sphere; Brentin denied it, could see no sign of
-Thatcher’s soul anywhere; so I left them trying
-to shout each other down, both speaking at
-once.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I retired to rest with many solemn, touching
-thoughts. The last night of bachelorhood gives
-rise to at least as much deep reflection as that of
-the young maiden’s; more, in fact, so far as the
-bachelor himself is concerned. I thought over
-it all so long and deeply I at last got confused,
-and when I woke, the bright February sun was
-streaming in on my best clothes and the bells
-from Nesshaven Church were ringing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All the morning those bells rang out their happy,
-irregular peal.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>“The village church beneath the trees,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Where first our marriage vows were given,</p>
-<p class='line0'>With merry peal shall swell the breeze,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And point with slender spire to heaven!”</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Only, to be exact, Nesshaven Church has no
-spire, but a sunk, old, bird-haunted, ivy-clad
-tower.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was Thatcher’s idea to set the bells going
-early and keep them at it all day; you see, they
-rang not only for the marriage of his only child,
-but for his return to their ancestral home; and,
-when they showed any sign of flagging, Thatcher
-listened with a pained expression, and cried,
-“Why, surely they’re not going to stop yet!
-Run, Bobby, or Harriet, or George, my man!”—or
-whoever happened to be handy—“and tell
-’em to keep ’em going, and give ’em this from
-me. Here, Vincent, my boy, have you got half-a-crown?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By ten o’clock we were all dressed and ready,
-waiting only for Forsyth. Soon after ten he
-came, and the procession started. It was a lovely
-day again, mild and sunny, and, in true country-wedding
-fashion, we all set out to walk.
-Lucy, looking perfectly sweet in gray, was on her
-father’s arm, and the old lady, in black silk, on
-mine; while Brentin, carrying his grip, with the
-boodle in it, and that good little chap, Forsyth,
-brought up the rear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old lady, who within the last three months
-seemed to me to have failed a good deal, mentally,
-at any rate, stepped out right well, hanging
-lightly on my arm. At first she thought we
-were going straight to the church, and couldn’t
-understand why we left it on our right and went
-on up to the big house. Then she seemed to
-think it quite natural, and that the place was hers
-again, and began talking of her early days, when
-first she was married and came to Wharton as a
-bride. Once or twice, indeed, she called me
-“Francis,” her husband’s name, who died in
-1850, and drew my attention to the scandalous,
-weedy state of the walks.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And this is what we pay good wages for!”
-she cried. “These men must be spoken to about
-it, my dear, immediately.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The gardener’s wife, who opened for us the
-hall door, was astonished at our numbers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, what a crowd of you!” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old lady passed her haughtily.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Come, Tom!” she cried to Mr. Thatcher.
-“We’ll go up-stairs and have tea in <span class='it'>my</span> room.
-Come, Lucy!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And up-stairs, up the bare stone staircase, they
-went, for, as I whispered to Thatcher, it was just
-as well the ladies should be out of the way while
-we did our business.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the great empty drawing-room we found old
-Crage ready waiting for us. He had dressed
-himself up in rusty attorney black for the occasion,
-and the plain kitchen-table was neatly
-spread with bundles of documents, title-deeds,
-and so forth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the woman showed us in, she told me he
-had been up all night rummaging in his old tin
-boxes, talking and mumbling to himself. Now
-he seemed quite spry and well again. I could
-scarcely believe, as he sat there alert and attentive,
-he was the same stricken, shambling old
-hunks I had seen the previous afternoon, dragging
-himself about, senile and dying. Such is
-the power of the will and the business instinct,
-prolonged even to the verge of the grave!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brentin, who, as usual, took everything into
-his own hands, adopted the simplest method of
-dealing with him. Crage received us in complete
-silence, and no one spoke a word, while Brentin
-opened his grip and took out the notes and
-two or three little bags of gold. The gold he
-emptied into heaps and piled them round the
-notes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, “Thirty thousand pounds,” he said,
-with a smile—“thirty thousand pounds! Is it
-a deal?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Crage sat bolt upright, with his hand curved
-over his ear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For the entire property?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For the entire property. Is it a deal?
-Thirty thousand pounds, neither less nor more.”
-And he emptied the grip and shook it, to show
-that not a penny more remained.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s worth more in the open market,” said
-Crage, cautiously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then take it to the open market. We have
-no time to haggle. My client is on his way to
-be married. Good-day.” And with that he
-began to scrape the notes and gold together
-again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hold hard!” cried Crage. “Don’t hurry an
-old man.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’ll give the old man three minutes,” said
-Brentin, coolly pulling out his watch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We were all three of us grouped round the
-table, watching Crage, with our backs to the
-door. The woman stood at his elbow, and we
-could, in the complete silence, hear the heavy,
-swinging tick-tick of Brentin’s large old-fashioned
-watch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Half time!” cried Brentin, when suddenly
-we heard steps outside in the hall. I had just
-time to recognize Bailey Thompson’s even, divisional
-tread, when he pushed the door open
-and stepped in. He was dressed as usual, and
-behind him came a gentleman in a tight black
-frock-coat, an evident Frenchman, thin, dark,
-and wiry, with a withered face, like a preserved
-Bordeaux plum.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“One moment, if—you—please, gentlemen!”
-cried Bailey Thompson, as he stepped up to the
-table.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My heart gave a bound, and Forsyth started
-and said, “Ho!” but the unabashed Brentin
-merely politely replied, “One moment to <span class='it'>you</span>,
-sir. We will attend to you directly.—Time’s up,
-Mr. Crage! is it or is it not a deal?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bailey Thompson laughed. “Cool as ever,
-Mr. Brentin, I see,” he said. “But don’t you
-think this amusing farce of yours has gone on
-long enough? It has been successful so far, as
-I always thought it would be!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re mighty good!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We have no desire to be unduly hard on
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You are mighty particular good!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Casino authorities are, on the whole,
-willing to regard you as eccentric English gentlemen
-of position, who have played a very cruel
-practical joke on them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That so?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That is so. This is their representative,
-Mossieu Cochefort.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Enchantay!</span>” cried Brentin, with a bow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He is charged to say that, on the due return
-of the money you have sto—ahem!—carried off,
-and an undertaking from you in writing that
-you none of you ever visit the place again, on
-any pretence, they are willing to forego criminal
-proceedings, and no further questions will be
-asked.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, come off it!” cried Brentin, laughing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Otherwise,” continued Bailey Thompson,
-with great gravity, “I must ask you, Mr. Blacker,
-and Mr. Forsyth here, to follow me to the cab in
-waiting at the door, and return with us to London
-as our prisoners.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In short, sir,” said Brentin, swelling with
-indignant importance, “you invite <span class='it'>us</span>, eccentric
-gentlemen of recognized position, to compound
-a felony!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thompson shrugged his shoulders, and Mossieu
-Cochefort looked puzzled.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Be ashamed of yourself, sir!” Brentin cried,
-his voice ringing scornfully through the empty
-room. “Be ashamed of yourselves, you and
-Mossieu Cochefort, and give over talking through
-your hat! Mr. Crage, if you will write out a
-formal receipt we will look upon the affair as
-settled. The formal transfer can be effected
-later.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aye, aye!” mumbled Crage, and, with his
-eyes on the money, began fumbling in the inside
-pocket of his rusty black coat for the receipt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Gentlemen!” cried Thompson, with affected
-earnestness, “I warn you! I very solemnly warn
-you—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, come off it, Mr. Bailey Thompson, sir!”
-was Brentin’s emphatic and withering reply;
-“come off it, and shut your head. We have long
-had enough of you and your gas. For my part,
-my earnest advice to you and Mossieu Cochefort
-is that you kiss yourselves good-bye and go your
-several ways. And tell your amazing Casino
-Company from us that the only undertaking we
-will give them is not to come and do it again in
-the fall. To repeat a success is always dangerous;
-and next time, no doubt, you will all be
-better prepared.—Now, Mr. Crage, the receipt!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Qu’est ce qu’il a dit?</span>” asked the puzzled
-Frenchman, as Thompson, fuming and fretting,
-dragged him off to the window to explain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meantime old Crage had produced his receipt,
-already written and signed, and, handing it over,
-with trembling, eager fingers was beginning to
-count the notes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ten fifties—ten thousands—ten twenties,”
-he was mumbling, “nice clean notes—beautiful
-crisp notes—he won’t get ’em back from me,
-if that’s what he’s after! No, no, not from
-Crage. Crage wasn’t in Clement’s Inn for forty
-years for nothing. Ten more fifties!—” So he
-went on mumbling to himself, and stuffing the
-notes away in a broken old pocket-book, while
-Brentin handed me over the receipt, and snapped
-his grip with a click.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s all right,” he whispered. “We’ve bluffed
-’em. Keep cool.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hadn’t you better let me keep ’em for you!”
-whined the woman, bending over Crage’s chair.
-“You’ll only lose ’em. Give ’em me to take
-care of for you, there’s a dearie!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To which pathetic appeal the old man paid no
-sort of heed, but pushed the pocket-book into
-his inside breast-pocket, with many senile signs
-of satisfaction and joy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And now!” cried Brentin, in imperturbable
-high spirits, “the wedding-procession will reform,
-and proceed to the church for the tying
-of the sacred knot. Mr. Bailey Thompson—Mossieu
-Cochefort—we shall be glad if you will
-join us, and afterwards, at ‘The French Horn,’
-to a slight but high-toned repast. Good-day,
-Mr. Crage; take care of yourself and your
-money. Let us hope that when the robins nest
-they will find you in your usual robust health.
-Mossieu Cochefort—Mr. Bailey Thompson—if
-you will kindly follow us—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But a sudden access of fury seemed to have
-seized the usually calm little detective; he was
-stamping his feet, waving his arms, almost foaming
-at the mouth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In execrable French, Stratford-atte-Bow-Street
-French, he began to swear aloud he would have
-nothing more to do with it, that he had done his
-best, that he had never yet had dealings with
-the French police but they hadn’t muddled it;
-for his part, his work was finished, and he was
-going home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Here they are!” he cried, “three of them,
-all ready for you. Will you have them, or won’t
-you? <span class='it'>Les voilar! Nong? Vous ne les voulay
-pas?</span> Then if you don’t want them, why the ——”
-(dreadful bad word!) “did you bring me
-off down here?” he yelled, breaking into profane
-English.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Mais, voyons! voyons!</span>” murmured the startled
-and conciliatory Cochefort.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Damn your <span class='it'>voyons</span>!” Bailey Thompson
-screamed. “If you don’t want them, and won’t
-take them, do the rest of it yourself, the best
-way you can. I wash my hands of it. Good-day,
-gentlemen, and thank your lucky stars for
-the imbecility of the French police!” and with
-that he rushed to the door, through the hall,
-and out into his cab. As he pulled the hall
-door open I heard the wedding-bells come surging
-in with a new burst of joy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Mais, mon ami!</span>” cried Cochefort, as Thompson
-tore himself away, “<span class='it'>ne me laissez pas comme
-ça!</span>” and with much gesticulation prepared to
-follow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Brentin sagely stopped him. “<span class='it'>Restay,
-Mossieu Cochefort!</span>” he said, graciously; “<span class='it'>Restay
-avec nous. Tout va biang. Restay!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Mais, quel cochon!</span>” cried the angry Cochefort,
-stretching out his black kid hands, and
-shaking them in Bailey Thompson’s direction.
-“<span class='it'>Ma parole d’honneur! a t’on jamais vu un
-pareil sacré cochon!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>C’est vrai!</span>” said Brentin. “<span class='it'>Mais il est
-toujours comme ça. Vous savvy, il n’est pas
-gentilhomme. Nous sommes tous gentilhommes.
-Nous vous garderong et vous traiterong tray biang.
-Restay!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So Mossieu Cochefort allowed himself to be
-comforted, and restay’d. We took him with us
-to the church, and did him right well at lunch,
-and then, so forlorn and downcast the poor
-creature seemed, Lucy and I carried him off
-with us up to town, if only out of kindness, to
-put him on his way back to Monaco.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the way up in the train he confessed to
-me his only instructions had been to try and get
-the money back, and that if he couldn’t manage
-that, or part of it, he was directed not to think
-of embarrassing the authorities by taking us all
-in charge. I could conceive, he said, that the
-authorities didn’t want to be made the laughing-stock
-of Europe by having to try us, nor to add
-to their already heavy expenses by keeping us in
-prison—nearly all quite young men—for the
-term of our natural lives. He hadn’t been able
-fully to explain all this to Bailey Thompson: the
-man was such a lunatic, he said, and so obstinate:
-and besides, from the moment of his
-arrival Bailey Thompson had ridden the high
-horse over him, and proudly declaring he didn’t
-require to be taught his duties by a foreigner,
-had immediately carried him off down to Nesshaven,
-scarcely allowing him once to open his
-mouth all the way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At Liverpool Street he seemed more lost, poor
-wretch, than ever. He knew no single word of
-English, and looked at us so pathetically, as we
-stood on the platform together, our soft hearts
-were touched. So we made up our minds to
-carry him along with us to Folkestone, dine him
-at the “Pavilion,” and afterwards see him safe
-on board the night-boat for Boulogne.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was droll, all the same, this carrying a French
-detective about with us on our wedding-day; but
-the man was so truly grateful I have never regretted
-it. We gave him a good dinner at the
-hotel, and at ten o’clock walked him out on
-to the pier for his boat. He made me a little
-speech at parting, declaring I had treated him
-“<span class='it'>en vrai camarade</span>,” and that if ever I wanted
-to come to Monte Carlo again I was to let him
-know and he would see I came to no harm. To
-Lucy he presented all his compliments and felicitations
-on securing the affection of “<span class='it'>un si
-galant homme!</span>” and then, with a twenty-pound
-note I slipped into his hand at parting, bowed
-himself away, and was soon lost to sight in the
-purlieus of the second cabin, whither he went
-prepared to be dreadfully sick, smooth and calm
-as the night was.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As Lucy and I strolled back to the hotel, arm-in-arm,
-we both were silent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last, just as we got back and heard the
-steamer’s final clanging bell and despairing whistle,
-“I can’t make out, really, whether you’ve
-all done right or wrong,” she whispered, softly;
-“but this I know, dearest, you have been most
-extraordinarily lucky.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To which simple little speech I merely pressed
-her arm, by way of showing how thoroughly I
-agreed with her.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id='p243'>CONCLUSION</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>This</span> is the true account of our raiding the
-tables at Monte Carlo, done the best way I could.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For the rest, I may just mention poor old Crage
-died before the end of the month, and by Easter
-Mr. Thatcher and his mother were safely installed
-in Wharton Park. Arthur Masters was married
-to Miss Rybot in April, Forsyth is to do the same
-to a widow (so he says) in September, Bob Hines
-is very flourishing with his new gymnasium and
-swimming-bath—just about finished now, as I
-write, at the end of June—and Parsons is, I believe,
-at Southport, parading Lord Street as usual
-in breeches and gaiters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As for Brentin, I never saw him again, for by
-the time Lucy and I had returned from our
-honeymoon he was back in New York. But I
-heard from him the other day—a long, rambling
-letter, in which he told me he had sold the <span class='it'>Amaranth</span>
-to Van Ginkel, for his wife the Princess
-Danleno, whom he had remarried, and with
-whom, on separate vessels, he was sailing about
-the Greek Archipelago—probably in belated
-search for Bailey Thompson. He concluded
-by begging me to think of something “snappy”
-we could do together in the fall, ending finally
-by writing: “What’s the matter with our going
-to Egypt and turning the Nile into the Red Sea?
-A communicative stranger, an Englishman, by his
-accent, assures me there is just one place where
-it can be done. Think it over, sonny, and if you
-decide to do it, count on me. Sincerely, <span class='sc'>Julius
-C. Brentin</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I would write more, only Lucy is calling to me
-from the hay-field, the other side of the ha-ha of
-Wharton, where I have come to finish this work
-in retirement.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>“Around my ivied porch shall cling</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Each fragrant flower that drinks the dew,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And Lucy at her wheel shall sing</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;In russet gown with ’kerchief blue.”</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As my dear Lucy says, I really am, and always
-have been, a most extraordinarily lucky man.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:3em;font-size:.8em;'>THE END</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>TRANSCRIBER NOTES</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Misspelled words and printer errors have been corrected.
-Some words are hyphenated by the author for emphasis.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Inconsistencies in punctuation have been maintained.</p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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