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I AM still uncertain which
surprised me more, the telegram calling my attention to the advertisement, or
the advertisement itself. The telegram is before me as I write. It would
appear to have been handed in at Vere Street at eight o’clock in the morning of
May 11, 1897, and received before half-past at Holloway B.O. And in that drab
region it duly found me, unwashen but at work before the day grew hot and my
attic insupportable.
“See Mr. Maturin’s advertisement Daily Mail might suit you earnestly beg try will speak if necessary—”
I transcribe the thing as I see it before me, all in one breath
that took away mine; but I leave out the initials at the end, which completed
the surprise. They stood very obviously for the knighted specialiist whose consulting-room
is within a cab-whistle of Vere Street, and who once called me kinsman for his
sins. More recently he had called me other names. I was a disgrace, qualified
by an adjective which seemed to me another. I had made my bed, and I could go
and lie and die in it. If I ever again had the insolence to show my nose in
that house, I should go out quicker than I came in. All this, and more, my
least distant relative could tell a poor devil to his face; could ring for his
man, and give him his brutal instructions on the spot; and then relent to the
tune of this telegram! I have no phrase for my amazement. I literally could not
believe my eyes. Yet their evidence was more and more conclusive: a very
epistle could not have been more characteristic of its sender. Meanly
elliptical, ludicrously precise, saving half-pence at the expense of sense, yet
paying like a man for “Mr.” Maturin, that was my distinguished relative from
his bald patch to his corns. Nor was all the rest unlike him, upon second
thoughts. He had a reputation for charity; he was going to live up to it after
all. Either that, or it was the sudden impulse of which the most calculating
are capable at times; the morning papers with the early cup of tea, this
advertisement seen by chance, and the rest upon the spur of a guilty
conscience.
Well, I must see it for
myself, and the sooner the better, though work pressed. I was writing a series
of articles upon prison life, and had my nib into the whole System; a literary
and philanthropical daily was parading my “charges,” the graver ones with more
gusto; and the terms, if unhandsome for creative work, were temporary wealth to
me. It so happened that my first check had just arrived by the eight o’clock
post; and my position should be appreciated when I say that I had to cash it to
obtain a Daily Mail.
Of the advertisement itself,
what is to be said? It should speak for itself if I could find it, but I
cannot, and only remember that it was a “male nurse and constant attendant”
that was “wanted for an elderly gentleman in feeble health.” A male nurse! An
absurd tag was appended, offering “liberal salary to University or public-school
man”; and of a sudden I saw that I should get this thing if I applied for it.
What other “University or public-school man” would dream of doing so? Was any
other in such straits as I? And then my relenting relative; he not only promised
to speak for me, but was the very man to do so. Could any recommendation
compete with his in the matter of a male nurse? And need the duties of such be
necessarily loathsome and repellent? Certainly the surroundings would be
better than those of my common lodging-house and own particular garret; and the
food; and every other condition of life that I could think of on my way back to
that unsavory asylum. So I dived into a pawnbroker’s shop, where I was a
stranger only upon my present errand, and within the hour was airing a decent
if antiquated suit, but little corrupted by the pawnbroker’s moth, and a new
straw hat, on the top of a tram.
The address given in the
advertisement was that of a flat at Earl’s Court, which cost me a cross-country
journey, finishing with the District Railway and a seven minutes’ walk. It was
now past mid-day, and the tarry wood-pavement was good to smell as I strode up
the Earl’s Court Road. It was great to walk the civilized world again. Here were
men with coats on their backs, and ladies in gloves. My only fear was lest I
might run up against one or other whom I had known of old. But it was my lucky
day. I felt it in my bones. I was going to get this berth; and sometimes I
should be able to smell the wood-pavement on the old boy’s errands; perhaps he
would insist on skimming over it in his bath-chair, with me behind.
I felt quite nervous when I
reached the flats.
They were a small pile in a
side street, and I pitied the doctor whose plate I saw upon the palings before
the ground-floor windows; he must be in a very small way, I thought. I rather
pitied myself as well. I had indulged in visions of better flats than these.
There were no balconies. The porter was out of livery. There was no lift, and my
invalid on the third floor! I trudged up, wishing I had never lived in Mount
Street, and brushed against a dejected individual coming down. A full-blooded
young fellow in a frock-coat flung the right door open at my summons.
“Does Mr. Maturin live here?”
I inquired.
“That’s right,” said the
full-blooded young man, grinning all over a convivial countenance. “I — I’ve come
about his advertisement in the Daily
Mail.”
“You’re the thirty-ninth,”
cried the blood; “that was the thirty-eighth you met upon the stairs, and the
days still young. Excuse my staring at you. Yes, you pass your prelim., and can
come inside; you’re one of the few. We had most just after breakfast, but now
the porter’s heading off the worst cases, and that last chap was the first for
twenty minutes. Come in here.”
And I was ushered into an
empty room with a good bay-window, which enabled my full-blooded friend to
inspect me yet more critically in a good light; this he did without the least
false delicacy; then his questions began.
“Varsity man?”
“No.”
“Public school?”
“Yes.”
“Which one?”
I told him, and he sighed
relief.
“At last! You’re the very
first I’ve not had to argue with as to what is and what is not a public school.
Expelled?”
“No,” I said, after a
moment’s hesitation; “no, I was not expelled. And I hope you won’t expel me if
I ask a question in my turn?”
“Certainly not.”
“Are you Mr. Maturin’s son?”
“No, my name’s Theobald. You
may have seen it down below.”
“The doctor?” I said.
“His doctor,” said Theobald,
with a satisfied eye. “Mr. Maturin’s doctor. He is having a male nurse and
attendant by my advice, and he wants a gentleman if he can get one. I rather
think he’ll see you, though he’s only seen two or three all day. There are
certain questions which he prefers to ask himself, and it’s no good going on
the same ground twice. So perhaps I had better tell him about you before we get
any further.”
And he withdrew to a room
still nearer the entrance, as I could hear, for it was a very small flat
indeed. But now two doors were shut between us, and I had to rest content with
murmurs through the wall until the doctor returned to summon me.
“I have persuaded my patient
to see you,” he whispered, “but I confess I am not sanguine of the result. He
is very difficult to please. You must prepare yourself for a querulous invalid,
and for no sinecure if you get the billet.”
“May I ask what’s the matter
with him?”
“By all means — when you’ve
got the billet.” Dr. Theobald then led the way, his professional dignity so
thoroughly intact that I could not but smile as I followed his swinging coat-tails
to the sick-room. I carried no smile across the threshold of a darkened chamber
which reeked of drugs and twinkled with medicine bottles, and in the middle of
which a gaunt figure lay abed in the half-light.
“Take him to the window,
take him to the window,” a thin voice snapped, “and let’s have a look at him.
Open the blind a bit. Not as much as that, damn you, not as much as that!”
The doctor took the oath as
though it had been a fee. I no longer pitied him. It was now very clear to me
that he had one patient who was a little practice in himself. I determined
there and then that he should prove a little profession to me, if we could but
keep him alive between us. Mr. Maturin, however, had the whitest face that I
have ever seen, and his teeth gleamed out through the dusk as though the
withered lips no longer met about them; nor did they except in speech; and
anything ghastlier than the perpetual grin of his repose I defy you to imagine.
It was with this grin that he lay regarding me while the doctor held the blind.
“So you think you could look
after me, do you?”
“I’m certain I could, sir.”
“Single-handed, mind! I
don’t keep another soul. You would have to cook your own grub and my slops. Do
you think you could do all that?”
“Yes, sir, I think so.”
“Why do you? Have you any
experience of the kind?”
“No, sir, none.”
“Then why do you pretend you
have?”
“I only meant that I would
do my best.”
“Only meant, only meant!
Have you done your best at everything else, then?”
I hung my head. This was a facer.
And there was something in my invalid which thrust the unspoken lie down my
throat.
“No, sir, I have not,” I
told him plainly.
“He, he, he!” the old wretch
tittered; “and you do well to own it; you do well, sir, very well indeed. If
you hadn’t owned up, out you would have gone, out neck-and-crop! You’ve saved
your bacon. You may do more. So you are a public-school boy, and a very good
school yours is, but you weren’t at either University. Is that correct?”
“Absolutely.”
“What did you do when you
left school?”
“I came in for money.”
“And then?”
“I spent my money.”
“And since then?”
I stood like a mule. “And
since then, I say!”
“A relative of mine will
tell you if you ask him. He is an eminent man, and he has promised to speak for
me. I would rather say no more myself.”
“But you shall, sir, but you
shall! Do you suppose that I suppose a public-school boy would apply for a
berth like this if something or other hadn’t happened? What I want is a
gentleman of sorts, and I don’t much care what sort; but you’ve got to tell me
what did happen, if you don’t tell anybody else. Dr. Theobald, sir, you can go
to the devil if you won’t take a hint. This man may do or he may not. You have
no more to say to it till I send him down to tell you one thing or the other.
Clear out, sir, clear out; and if you think you’ve anything to complain of, you
stick it down in the bill!”
In the mild excitement of
our interview the thin voice had gathered strength, and the last shrill insult was
screamed after the devoted medico, as he retired in such order that I felt
certain he was going to take this trying patient at his word. The bedroom door
closed, then the outer one, and the doctor’s heels went drumming down the
common stair. I was alone in the flat with this highly singular and rather
terrible old man.
“And a damned good
riddance!” croaked the invalid, raising himself on one elbow without delay. “I
may not have much body left to boast about, but at least I’ve got a lost old
soul to call my own. That’s why I want a gentleman of sorts about me. I’ve been
too dependent on that chap. He won’t even let me smoke, and he’s been in the
flat all day to see I didn’t. You’ll find the cigarettes behind the Madonna of
the Chair.”
It was a steel engraving of
the great Raffaelle, and the frame was tilted from the wall; at a touch a
packet of cigarettes tumbled down from behind. “Thanks; and now a light.”
I struck a match and held
it, while the invalid inhaled with normal lips; and suddenly I sighed. I was
irresistibly reminded of my poor dear old Raffles. A smoke-ring worthy of the
great A. J. was floating upward from the sick man’s lips.
“And now take one yourself.
I have smoked more poisonous cigarettes. But even these are not Sullivans!”
I cannot repeat what I said. I have no idea what I did. I only know — I only knew — that it was A. J. Raffles in the flesh!
“YES, Bunny, it was the very
devil of a swim; but I defy you to sink in the Mediterranean. That sunset saved
me. The sea was on fire. I hardly swam under water at all, but went all I knew
for the sun itself; when it set I must have been a mile away; until it did I
was the invisible man. I figured on that, and only hope it wasn’t set down as a
case of suicide. I shall get outed quite soon enough, Bunny, but I’d rather be
dropped by the hangman than throw my own wicket away.”
“Oh, my dear old chap, to
think of having you by the hand again! I feel as though we were both aboard
that German liner, and all that’s happened since a nightmare. I thought that
time was the last!”
“It looked rather like it,
Bunny. It was taking all the risks, and hitting at everything. But the game
came off, and some day I’ll tell you how.”
“Oh, I’m in no hurry to
hear. It’s enough for me to see you lying there. I don’t want to know how you
came there, or why, though I fear you must be pretty bad. I must have a good
look at you before I let you speak another word!”
I raised one of the blinds,
I sat upon the bed, and I had that look. It left me all unable to conjecture his
true state of health, but quite certain in my own mind that my dear Raffles was
not and never would be the man that he had been. He had aged twenty years; he
looked fifty at the very least. His hair was white; there was no trick about
that; and his face was another white. The lines about the corners of the eyes
and mouth were both many and deep. On the other hand, the eyes themselves were
alight and alert as ever; they were still keen and gray and gleaming, like
finely tempered steel. Even the mouth, with a cigarette to close it, was the
mouth of Raffles and no other: strong and unscrupulous as the man himself. It
was only the physical strength which appeared to have departed; but that was
quite sufficient to make my heart bleed for the dear rascal who had cost me
every tie I valued but the tie between us two.
“Think I look much older?”
he asked at length.
“A bit,” I admitted. “But it
is chiefly your hair.”
“Whereby hangs a tale for
when we’ve talked ourselves out, though I have often thought it was that long
swim that started it. Still, the Island of Elba is a rummy show, I can assure
you. And Naples is a rummier.”
“You went there after all?”
“Rather! It’s the European
paradise for such as our noble selves. But there’s no place that’s a patch on
little London as a non-conductor of heat; it never need get too hot for a
fellow here; if it does it’s his own fault. It’s the kind of wicket you don’t
get out on, unless you get yourself out. So here I am again, and have been for
the last six weeks. And I mean to have another knock.”
“But surely, old fellow,
you’re not awfully fit, are you?”
“Fit? My dear Bunny, I’m dead
— I’m at the bottom of the sea — and don’t you forget it for a minute.”
“But are you all right, or
are you not?”
“No, I’m half-poisoned by Theobald’s
prescriptions and putrid cigarettes, and as weak as a cat from lying in bed.”
“Then why on earth lie in
bed, Raffles?”
“Because it’s better than
lying in gaol, as I am afraid you know, my poor, dear fellow. I tell you
I am dead; and my one terror is of coming to life again by accident. Can’t you
see? I simply dare not show my nose out of doors — by day. You have no idea of
the number of perfectly innocent things a dead man daren’t do. I can’t even
smoke Sullivans, because no one man was ever so partial to them as I was in my
lifetime, and you never know when you may start a clew.”
“What brought you to these
mansions?”
“I fancied a flat, and a man
recommended these on the boat; such a good chap, Bunny; he was my reference
when it came to signing the lease. You see I landed on a stretcher — most pathetic
case — old Australian without a friend in old country — ordered Engadine as
last chance — no go — not an earthly — sentimental wish to die in London —
that’s the history of Mr. Maturin. If it doesn’t hit you hard, Bunny, you’re
the first. But it hit friend Theobald hardest of all. I’m an income to him. I
believe he’s going to marry on me.”
“Does he guess there’s
nothing wrong?”
“Knows, bless you! But he
doesn’t know I know he knows, and there isn’t a disease in the dictionary that
he hasn’t treated me for since he’s had me in hand. To do him justice, I
believe he thinks me a hypochondriac of the first water; but that young man
will go far if he keeps on the wicket. He has spent half his nights up here, at
guineas apiece.”
“Guineas must be plentiful,
old chap!”
“They have been, Bunny. I
can’t say more. But I don’t see why they shouldn’t be again.”
I was not going to inquire
where the guineas came from. As if I cared! But I did ask old Raffles how in
the world he had got upon my tracks; and thereby drew the sort of smile with
which old gentlemen rub their hands, and old ladies nod their noses. Raffles
merely produced a perfect oval of blue smoke before replying.
“I was waiting for you to
ask that, Bunny; it’s a long time since I did anything upon which I plume
myself more. Of course, in the first place, I spotted you at once by these
prison articles; they were not signed, but the fist was the fist of my sitting
rabbit!”
“But who gave you my
address?”
“I wheedled it out of your
excellent editor; called on him at dead of night, when I occasionally go
afield like other ghosts, and wept it out of him in five minutes. I was your
only relative; your name was not your own name; if he insisted I would give him
mine. He didn’t insist, Bunny, and I danced down his stairs with your address
in my pocket.”
“Last night?”
“No, last week.”
“And so the advertisement
was yours, as well as the telegram!”
I had, of course, forgotten
both in the high excitement of the hour, or I should scarcely have announced
my belated discovery with such an air. As it was I made Raffles look at me as I
had known him look before, and the droop of his eyelids began to sting.
“Why all this subtlety?” I
petulantly exclaimed. “Why couldn’t you come straight away to me in a cab?”
He did not inform me that I
was hopeless as ever. He did not address me as his good rabbit.
He was silent for a time,
and then spoke in a tone which made me ashamed of mine.
“You see, there are two or
three of me now, Bunny: one’s at the bottom of the Mediterranean, and one’s an
old Australian desirous of dying in the old country, but in no immediate danger
of dying anywhere. The old Australian doesn’t know a soul in town; he’s got to
be consistent, or he’s done. This sitter Theobald is his only friend, and has
seen rather too much of him; ordinary dust won’t do for his eyes. Begin to see?
To pick you out of a crowd, that was the game; to let old Theobald help to pick
you, better still! To start with, he was dead against my having anybody at all;
wanted me all to himself, naturally; but anything rather than kill the goose!
So he is to have a fiver a week while he keeps me alive, and he’s going to be
married next month. That’s a pity in some ways, but a good thing in others; he
will want more money than he foresees, and he may always be of use to us at a
pinch. Meanwhile he eats out of my hand.”
I complimented Raffles on
the mere composition of his telegram, with half the characteristics of my
distinguished kinsman squeezed into a dozen odd words; and let him know how the
old ruffian had really treated me. Raffles was not surprised; we had dined
together at my relative’s in the old days, and filed for reference a professional
valuation of his household gods. I now learnt that the telegram had been
posted, with the hour marked for its despatch, at the pillar nearest Vere Street,
on the night before the advertisement was due to appear in the Daily Mail.
This also had been carefully prearranged; and Raffles’s only fear had been lest
it might be held over despite his explicit instructions, and so drive me to the
doctor for an explanation of his telegram. But the adverse chances had been
weeded out and weeded out to the irreducible minimum of risk.
His greatest risk, according
to Raffles, lay nearest home: bedridden invalid that he was supposed to be,
his nightly terror was of running into Theobald’s arms in the immediate
neighborhood of the flat. But Raffles had characteristic methods of minimizing
even that danger, of which something anon; meanwhile he recounted more than one
of his nocturnal adventures, all, however, of a singularly innocent type; and
one thing I noticed while he talked. His room was the first as you entered the
flat. The long inner wall divided the room not merely from the passage but from
the outer landing as well. Thus every step upon the bare stone stairs could be
heard by Raffles where he lay; and he would never speak while one was
ascending, until it had passed his door. The afternoon brought more than one applicant
for the post which it was my duty to tell them that I had already obtained.
Between three and four, however, Raffles, suddenly looking at his watch,
packed me off in a hurry to the other end of London for my things.
“I’m afraid you must be famishing,
Bunny. It’s a fact that I eat very little, and that at odd hours, but I ought
not to have forgotten you. Get yourself a snack outside, but not a square meal
if you can resist one. We’ve got to celebrate this day this night!”
“To-night?” I cried.
“To-night at eleven, and Kellner’s
the place. You may well open your eyes, but we didn’t go there much, if you
remember, and the staff seems changed. Anyway we’ll risk it for once. I was in
last night, talking like a stage American, and supper’s ordered for eleven
sharp.”
“You made as sure of me as
all that!”
“There was no harm in
ordering supper. We shall have it in a private room, but you may as well dress
if you’ve got the duds.”
“They’re at my only
forgiving relative’s.”
“How much will get them out,
and square you up, and bring you bag and baggage in good time?”
I had to calculate. “A tenner,
easily.”
“I had one ready for you.
Here it is, and I wouldn’t lose any time if I were you. On the way you might
look up Theobald, tell him you’ve got it and how long you’ll be gone, and that
I can’t be left alone all the time. And, by Jove, yes! You get me a stall for
the Lyceum at the nearest agent’s; there are two or three in High Street; and
say it was given you when you come in. That young man shall be out of the way to-night.”
I found our doctor in a
minute consulting-room and his shirt-sleeves, a tall tumbler at his elbow; at
least I caught sight of the tumbler on entering; thereafter he stood in front
of it, with a futility which had my sympathy.
“So you’ve got the billet,”
said Dr. Theobald. “Well, as I told you before, and as you have since probably
discovered for yourself, you won’t find it exactly a sinecure. My own part of
the business is by no means that; indeed there are those who would throw up the
case, after the kind of treatment that you have seen for yourself. But professional
considerations are not the only ones, and one cannot make too many allowances
in such a case.”
“But what is the case?” I
asked him. “You said you would tell me if I was successful.”
Dr. Theobald’s shrug was
worthy of the profession he seemed destined to adorn; it was not incompatible
with any construction which one chose to put upon it. Next moment he had stiffened.
I suppose I still spoke more or less like a gentleman. Yet, after all, I was
only the male nurse. He seemed to remember this suddenly, and he took occasion
to remind me of the fact.
“Ah,” said he, “that was before I
knew you were altogether without experience; and I must say that I was
surprised even at Mr. Maturin’s engaging you after that; but it will depend
upon yourself how long I allow him to persist in so curious an experiment. As
for what is the matter with him, my good fellow, it is of no use my giving you
an answer which would be double Dutch to you; moreover, I have still to test
your discretionary powers. I may say, however, that that poor gentleman
presents at once the most complex and most troublesome case, which is
responsibility enough without certain features which make it all but
insupportable. Beyond this I must refuse to discuss my patient for the present;
but I shall certainly go up if I can find time.”
He went up within five
minutes. I found him there on my return at dusk. But he did not refuse my stall
for the Lyceum, which Raffles would not allow me to use myself, and presented
to him off-hand without my leave.
“And don’t you bother any more about me till to-morrow,” snapped the high, thin voice as he was off. “I can send for you now when I want you, and I’m hoping to have a decent night for once.”
IT was half-past ten when we
left the flat, in an interval of silence on the noisy stairs. The silence was
unbroken by our wary feet. Yet for me a surprise was in store upon the very
landing. Instead of going downstairs, Raffles led me up two flights, and so out
upon a perfectly flat roof.
“There are two entrances to these mansions,” he explained between stars and chimney-stacks; “one to our staircase, and another round the corner. But there’s only one porter, and he lives on the basement underneath us, and affects the door nearest home. We miss him by using the wrong stairs, and we run less risk of old Theobald. I got the tip from the postmen, who come up one way and down the other. Now, follow me, and look out!”
"Now follow me, and look out."
There was indeed some
necessity for caution, for each half of the building had its L-shaped well
dropping sheer to the base, the parapets so low that one might easily have
tripped over them into eternity. However, we were soon upon the second
staircase, which opened on the roof like the first. And twenty minutes of the
next twenty-five we spent in an admirable hansom, skimming east.
“Not much change in the old
hole, Bunny. More of these magic-lantern advertisements . . . and absolutely
the worst bit of taste in town, though it’s saying something, in that
equestrian statue with the gilt stirrups and fixings; why don’t they black the
buffer’s boots and his horse’s hoofs while they are about it? . . . More
bicyclists, of course. That was just beginning, if you remember. It might have
been useful to us. . . . And there’s the old club, getting put into a
crate for the Jubilee; by Jove, Bunny, we ought to be there. I wouldn’t lean
forward in Piccadilly, old chap. If you’re seen I’m thought of, and we shall
have to be jolly careful at Kellner’s. . . . Ah, there it is! Did I tell you
I was a low-down stage Yankee at Kellner’s? You’d better be another, while the
waiter’s in the room.”
We had the little room
upstairs; and on the very threshold I, even I, who knew my Raffles of old, was
taken horribly aback. The table was laid for three. I called his attention to
it in a whisper.
“Why, yep!” came through his
nose. “Say, boy, the lady, she’s not comin’, but you leave that tackle where ‘tis.
If I’m liable to pay, I guess I’ll have all there is to it.”
I have never been in
America, and the American public is the last on earth that I desire to insult;
but idiom and intonation alike would have imposed upon my inexperience. I had
to look at Raffles to make sure that it was he who spoke, and I had my own reasons
for looking hard.
“Who on earth was the lady?”
I inquired aghast at the first opportunity.
“She isn’t on earth. They
don’t like wasting this room on two, that’s all. Bunny — my Bunny — here’s to
us both!”
And we clinked glasses
swimming with the liquid gold of Steinberg, 1868; but of the rare delights of
that supper I can scarcely trust myself to write. It was no mere meal, it was
no coarse orgy, but a little feast for the fastidious gods, not unworthy of Lucullus
at his worst. And I who had bolted my skilly at Wormwood Scrubbs, and tightened
my belt in a Holloway attic, it was I who sat down to this ineffable repast!
Where the courses were few, but each a triumph of its kind, it would be
invidious to single out any one dish; but the Jambon de Westphalie au Champagne
tempts me sorely. And then the champagne that we drank, not the quantity but
the quality! Well, it was Pol Roger, ‘84, and quite good enough for me; but
even so it was not more dry, nor did it sparkle more, than the merry rascal who
had dragged me thus far to the devil, but should lead me dancing the rest of
the way. I was beginning to tell him so. I had done my honest best since my
reappearance in the world; but the world had done its worst by me. A further
antithesis and my final intention were both upon my tongue when the waiter with
the Château Margaux cut me short; for he was the bearer of more than that great
wine; bringing also a card upon a silver tray.
“Show him up,” said Raffles,
laconically.
“And who is this?” I cried
when the man was gone. Raffles reached across the table and gripped my arm in a
vice. His eyes were steel points fixed on mine.
“Bunny, stand by me,” said
he in the old irresistible voice, a voice both stern and winning. “Stand by me,
Bunny — if there’s a row!”
And there was time for
nothing more, the door flying open, and a dapper person entering with a bow; a frock-coat
on his back, gold pince-nez on his nose; a shiny hat in one hand, and a black
bag in the other.
“Good-evening, gentlemen,”
said he, at home and smiling.
“Sit down,” drawled Raffles
in casual response. “Say, let me introduce you to Mr. Ezra B. Martin, of Shicawgo.
Mr. Martin is my future brother-in-law. This is Mr. Robinson, Ezra, manager to
Sparks & Company, the cellerbrated joolers on Regent Street.”
I pricked up my ears, but
contented myself with a nod. I altogether distrusted my ability to live up to
my new name and address.
“I figured on Miss Martin bein’
right here, too,” continued Raffles, “but I regret to say she’s not feelin’ so
good. We light out for Parrus on the 9 A.M. train to-morrer mornin’, and she
guessed she’d be too dead. Sorry to disappoint you, Mr. Robinson; but you’ll
see I’m advertisin’ your wares.”
Raffles held his right hand
under the electric light, and a diamond ring flashed upon his little finger. I
could have sworn it was not there five minutes before.
The tradesman had a
disappointed face, but for a moment it brightened as he expatiated on the value
of that ring and on the price his people had accepted for it. I was invited to
guess the figure, but I shook a discreet head. I have seldom been more taciturn
in my life.
“Forty-five pounds,” cried
the jeweller; “and it would be cheap at fifty guineas.”
“That’s right,” assented
Raffles. “That’d be dead cheap, I allow. But then, my boy, you gotten ready
cash, and don’t you forget it.”
I do not dwell upon my own
mystification in all this. I merely pause to state that I was keenly enjoying
that very element. Nothing could have been more typical of Raffles and the
past. It was only my own attitude that was changed.
It appeared that the
mythical lady, my sister, had just become engaged to Raffles, who seemed all
anxiety to pin her down with gifts of price. I could not quite gather whose
gift to whom was the diamond ring; but it had evidently been paid for; and I
voyaged to the moon, wondering when and how. I was recalled to this planet by a
deluge of gems from the jeweller’s bag. They lay alight in their cases like the
electric lamps above. We all three put our heads together over them, myself
without the slightest clew as to what was coming, but not unprepared for
violent crime. One does not do eighteen months for nothing.
“Right away,” Raffles was
saying. “We’ll choose for her, and you’ll change anything she don’t like. Is
that the idea?”
“That was my suggestion,
sir.”
“Then come on, Ezra. I
guess you know Sadie’s taste. You help me choose.”
And we chose — lord! What
did we not choose? There was her ring, a diamond half-hoop. It cost £85, and
there was no attempt to get it for £80. Then there was a diamond necklet — two hundred
guineas, but pounds accepted. That was to be the gift of the bridegroom. The
wedding was evidently imminent. It behooved me to play a brotherly part. I
therefore rose to the occasion; calculated she would like a diamond star
(£116), but reckoned it was more than I could afford; and sustained a vicious
kick under the table for either verb. I was afraid to open my mouth on finally
obtaining the star for the round hundred. And then the fat fell in the fire;
for pay we could not; though a remittance (said Raffles) was “overdo from Noo York.”
“But I don’t know you,
gentlemen,” the jeweller exclaimed. “I haven’t even the name of your hotel!”
“I
told you we was stoppin’ with
friends,” said Raffles, who was not angry, though thwarted
and crushed. “But
that’s right, sir! Oh, that’s dead right, and
I’m the last man to ask you to
take Quixotic risks. I’m tryin’ to figure a way
out. Yes, sir, that’s what I’m tryin’
to do.”
“I wish you could, sir,” the
jeweller said, with feeling. “It isn’t as if we hadn’t seen the color of your
money. But certain rules I’m sworn to observe; it isn’t as if I was in business
for myself; and — you say you start for Paris in the morning!”
“On the 9 A. M. train,”
mused Raffles; “and I’ve heard no-end yarns about the joolers’ stores in Parrus.
But that ain’t fair; don’t you take no notice o’ that. I’m tryin’ to figure a
way out. Yes, sir!”
He was smoking cigarettes
out of a twenty-five box; the tradesman and I had cigars. Raffles sat frowning
with pregnant eye, and it was only too clear to me that his plans had
miscarried. I could not help thinking, however, that they deserved to do so, if
he had counted upon buying credit for all but £400 by a single payment of some
ten per cent. That again seemed unworthy of Raffles, and for my part, still sat
prepared to spring any moment at our visitor’s throat.
“We could mail you the money
from Parrus,” drawled Raffles at length. “But how should we know you’d hold up
your end of the string, and mail us the same articles we’ve selected to-night?”
The visitor stiffened in his
chair. The name of his firm should be sufficient guarantee for that. “I guess
I’m no better acquainted with their name than they are with mine,” remarked
Raffles, laughing. “See here, though! I got a scheme. You pack ‘em in this!”
He turned the cigarettes out
of the tin box, while the jeweller and I joined wondering eyes. “Pack ‘em in
this,” repeated Raffles, “the three things we want, and never mind the boxes;
you can pack ‘em in cotton-wool. Then we’ll ring for string and sealing-wax, seal
up the lot right here, and you can take ‘em away in your grip. Within three
days we’ll have our remittance, and mail you the money, and you’ll mail us this
darned box with my seal unbroken! It’s no use you lookin’ so sick, Mr. Jooler; you
won’t trust us any, and yet we’re goin’ to trust you some. Ring the bell, Ezra,
and we’ll see if they’ve gotten any sealingwax and string.”
They had; and the thing was
done. The tradesman did not like it; the precaution was absolutely
unnecessary; but since he was taking all his goods away with him, the sold with
the unsold, his sentimental objections soon fell to the ground. He packed necklet,
ring, and star, with his own hands, in cotton-wool; and the cigarette-box held
them so easily that at the last moment, when the box was closed, and the string
ready, Raffles very nearly added a diamond bee-brooch at £51 10s. This temptation,
however, he ultimately overcame, to the other’s chagrin. The cigarette-box was
tied up, and the string sealed, oddly enough, with the diamond of the ring that
had been bought and paid for.
“I’ll chance you having
another ring in the store the dead spit of mine,” laughed Raffles, as he relinquished
the box, and it disappeared into the tradesman’s bag. “And now, Mr. Robinson, I
hope you’ll appreciate my true hospitality in not offering you anything to
drink while business was in progress. That’s Château Margaux, sir, and I should
judge it’s what you’d call an eighteen-carat article.”
In the cab which we took to
the vicinity of the flat, I was instantly snubbed for asking questions which
the driver might easily overhear, and I took the repulse just a little to
heart. I could make neither head nor tail of Raffles’s dealings with the man
from Regent Street, and was naturally in. quisitive as to the meaning of it
all. But I held my tongue until we had regained the flat in the cautious manner
of our exit, and even there until Raffles rallied me with a hand on either
shoulder and an old smile upon his face.
“You rabbit!” said he. “Why
couldn’t you wait till we got home?”
“Why couldn’t you tell me
what you were going to do?” I retorted as of yore.
“Because your dear old phiz is
still worth its weight in innocence, and because you never could act for nuts!
You looked as puzzled as the other poor devil; but you wouldn’t if you had
known what my game really was.”
“And pray what was it?”
“That,” said Raffles, and he
smacked the cigarette-box down upon the mantelpiece. It was not tied. It was
not sealed. It flew open from the force of the impact. And the diamond ring
that cost £95, the necklet for £200, and my flaming star at another £100, all
three lay safe and snug in the jeweller’s own cotton-wool!
“Duplicate boxes!” I cried.
“Duplicate boxes, my brainy
Bunny. One was already packed and weighted, and in my pocket. I don’t know
whether you noticed me weighing the three things together in my hand? I know
that neither of you saw me change the boxes, for I did it when I was nearest
buying the bee-brooch at the end, and you were too puzzled, and the other
Johnny too keen. It was the cheapest shot in the game; the dear ones were
sending old Theobald to Southampton on a fool’s errand yesterday afternoon, and
showing one’s own nose down Regent Street in broad daylight while he was gone;
but some things are worth paying for, and certain risks one must always take.
Nice boxes, aren’t they? I only wished they contained a better cigarette; but
a notorious brand was essential; a box of Sullivans would have brought me to
life tomorrow.”
“But they oughtn’t to open it to-morrow.”
“Nor will they, as a matter of fact. Meanwhile, Bunny, I may
call upon you to dispose of the boodle.”
“I’m on for any mortal
thing!”
My voice rang true, I swear,
but it was the way of Raffles to take the evidence of as many senses as
possible. I felt the cold steel of his eyes through mine and through my brain.
But what he saw seemed to satisfy him no less than what he heard, for his hand
found my hand, and pressed it with a fervor foreign to the man.
“I know you are, and I knew
you would be. Only remember, Bunny, it’s my turn next to pay the shot!”
You shall hear how he paid
it when the time came.