Arsene Lupin by Leblanc, Maurice, 1864-1941
Arsene Lupin by Leblanc, Maurice, 1864-1941
Arsene Lupin by Leblanc, Maurice, 1864-1941
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ARSENE LUPIN
BY
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
ARSENE LUPIN
The rays of the September sun flooded the great halls of the old
chateau of the Dukes of Charmerace, lighting up with their mellow
glow the spoils of so many ages and many lands, jumbled together with
the execrable taste which so often afflicts those whose only standard
of value is money. The golden light warmed the panelled walls and old
furniture to a dull lustre, and gave back to he fading gilt of the
First Empire chairs and couches something of its old brightness. It
illumined the long line of pictures on the walls, pictures of dead and
gone Charmeraces, the stern or debonair faces of the men, soldiers,
statesmen, dandies, the gentle or imperious faces of beautiful women.
It flashed back from armour of brightly polished steel, and drew dull
gleams from armour of bronze. The hues of rare porcelain, of the rich
inlays of Oriental or Renaissance cabinets, mingled with the hues of the
pictures, the tapestry, the Persian rugs about the polished floor to
fill the hall with a rich glow of colour.
But of all the beautiful and precious things which the sun-rays
warmed to a clearer beauty, the face of the girl who sat writing at
a table in front of the long windows, which opened on to the
centuries-old turf of the broad terrace, was the most beautiful and
the most precious.
It was a delicate, almost frail, beauty. Her skin was clear with the
transparent lustre of old porcelain, and her pale cheeks were only
tinted with the pink of the faintest roses. Her straight nose was
delicately cut, her rounded chin admirably moulded. A lover of
beauty would have been at a loss whether more to admire her clear,
germander eyes, so melting and so adorable, or the sensitive mouth,
with its rather full lips, inviting all the kisses. But assuredly he
would have been grieved by the perpetual air of sadness which rested
on the beautiful face--the wistful melancholy of the Slav, deepened
by something of personal misfortune and suffering.
Her face was framed by a mass of soft fair hair, shot with strands
of gold where the sunlight fell on it; and little curls, rebellious
to the comb, strayed over her white forehead, tiny feathers of gold.
She was addressing envelopes, and a long list of names lay on her
left hand. When she had addressed an envelope, she slipped into it a
wedding-card. On each was printed:
She wrote steadily on, adding envelope after envelope to the pile
ready for the post, which rose in front of her. But now and again,
when the flushed and laughing girls who were playing lawn-tennis on
the terrace, raised their voices higher than usual as they called
the score, and distracted her attention from her work, her gaze
strayed through the open window and lingered on them wistfully; and
as her eyes came back to her task she sighed with so faint a
wistfulness that she hardly knew she sighed. Then a voice from the
terrace cried, "Sonia! Sonia!"
"Tea! Order tea, will you?" cried the voice, a petulant voice,
rather harsh to the ear.
"Will you please bring the tea, Alfred," she said in a charming
voice of that pure, bell-like tone which has been Nature's most
precious gift to but a few of the greatest actresses.
"Oh, no; he's not back yet, miss. He went in the car to Rennes to
lunch; and it's a good many miles away. He won't be back for another
hour."
"And the Duke--he's not back from his ride yet, is he?"
"One moment," said Sonia. "Have all of you got your things packed
for the journey to Paris? You will have to start soon, you know. Are
all the maids ready?"
"Well, all the men are ready, I know, miss. But about the maids,
miss, I can't say. They've been bustling about all day; but it takes
them longer than it does us."
"Tell them to hurry up; and be as quick as you can with the tea,
please," said Sonia.
Alfred went out of the room; Sonia went back to the writing-table.
She did not take up her pen; she took up one of the wedding-cards;
and her lips moved slowly as she read it in a pondering depression.
"Whatever are you doing, Sonia? Aren't you getting on with those
letters?" it cried angrily; and Germaine Gournay-Martin came through
the long window into the hall.
The two friends with whom Germaine had been playing tennis followed
her into the hall: Jeanne Gautier, tall, sallow, dark, with a
somewhat malicious air; Marie Bullier, short, round, commonplace,
and sentimental.
They came to the table at which Sonia was at work; and pointing to
the pile of envelopes, Marie said, "Are these all wedding-cards?"
"Yes; and we've only got to the letter V," said Germaine, frowning
at Sonia.
"You'll know very few people at your wedding," said Jeanne, with a
spiteful little giggle.
"But we shall no longer be fit friends for you when you're the
Duchess of Charmerace," said Jeanne.
"Why?" said Germaine; and then she added quickly, "Above everything,
Sonia, don't forget Veauleglise, 33, University Street--33,
University Street."
"Don't ask me. I haven't the honour of knowing that great lady,"
cried Jeanne.
"Nor I," said Germaine. "But I have here the visiting-list of the
late Duchess of Charmerace, Jacques' mother. The two duchesses were
on excellent terms. Besides the Duchess of Veauleglise is rather
worn-out, but greatly admired for her piety. She goes to early
service three times a week."
Germaine pouted at her, and said: "Oh, he's gay enough when he's
making fun of people. But apart from that he's as sober as a judge."
"My dear! The Legion of Honour is all very well for middle-class
people, but it's quite out of place for a duke!" cried Germaine.
Alfred came in, bearing the tea-tray, and set it on a little table
near that at which Sonia was sitting.
Germaine, who was feeling too important to sit still, was walking up
and down the room. Suddenly she stopped short, and pointing to a
silver statuette which stood on the piano, she said, "What's this?
Why is this statuette here?"
"Why, when we came in, it was on the cabinet, in its usual place,"
said Sonia in some astonishment.
"Did you come into the hall while we were out in the garden,
Alfred?" said Germaine to the footman.
"But some one must have come into it," Germaine persisted.
Sonia poured out the tea; and over it they babbled about the coming
marriage, the frocks they would wear at it, and the presents
Germaine had already received. That reminded her to ask Sonia if any
one had yet telephoned from her father's house in Paris; and Sonia
said that no one had.
"That's very annoying," said Germaine. "It shows that nobody has
sent me a present to-day."
"It's Sunday. The shops don't deliver things on Sunday," said Sonia
gently.
"Isn't your beautiful Duke coming to have tea with us?" said Jeanne
a little anxiously.
"Gone for a ride with the two Du Buits? But when?" cried Marie
quickly.
"This afternoon."
"He can't be," said Marie. "My brother went to the Du Buits' house
after lunch, to see Andre and Georges. They went for a drive this
morning, and won't be back till late to-night."
"Well, but--but why did the Duke tell me so?" said Germaine,
knitting her brow with a puzzled air.
Germaine flushed quickly; and her eyes flashed. "Thank you. I have
every confidence in Jacques. I am absolutely sure of him," she said
angrily.
Germaine rushed to it, clapped the receiver to her ear, and cried:
"Hello, is that you, Pierre? . . . Oh, it's Victoire, is it? . . .
Ah, some presents have come, have they? . . . Well, well, what are
they? . . . What! a paper-knife--another paper-knife! . . . Another
Louis XVI. inkstand--oh, bother! . . . Who are they from? . . . Oh,
from the Countess Rudolph and the Baron de Valery." Her voice rose
high, thrilling with pride.
Then she turned her face to her friends, with the receiver still at
her ear, and cried: "Oh, girls, a pearl necklace too! A large one!
The pearls are big ones!"
"Who sent it?" said Germaine, turning to the telephone again. "Oh, a
friend of papa's," she added in a tone of disappointment. "Never
mind, after all it's a pearl necklace. You'll be sure and lock the
doors carefully, Victoire, won't you? And lock up the necklace in
the secret cupboard. . . . Yes; thanks very much, Victoire. I shall
see you to-morrow."
She hung up the receiver, and came away from the telephone frowning.
"You're joking, but all the same what you say is true," said
Germaine. "That's exactly what his cousin Madame de Relzieres said
to me the other day at the At Home she gave in my honour--wasn't it,
Sonia?" And she walked to the window, and, turning her back on them,
stared out of it.
"She HAS got her mouth full of that At Home," said Jeanne to Marie
in a low voice.
"No one knows. She got hold of a letter from the seconds," said
Marie.
Sonia did not seem to share her freedom from anxiety. Her forehead
was puckered in little lines of perplexity, as if she were puzzling
out some problem; and there was a look of something very like fear
in her gentle eyes.
"A great friend? I should think he was," said Germaine. "Why, it was
through Relzieres that we got to know Jacques."
"Yes; actually here. Isn't life funny?" said Germaine. "If, a few
months after his father's death, Jacques had not found himself hard-
up, and obliged to dispose of this chateau, to raise the money for
his expedition to the South Pole; and if papa and I had not wanted
an historic chateau; and lastly, if papa had not suffered from
rheumatism, I should not be calling myself in a month from now the
Duchess of Charmerace."
"Now what on earth has your father's rheumatism got to do with your
being Duchess of Charmerace?" cried Jeanne.
"Everything," said Germaine. "Papa was afraid that this chateau was
damp. To prove to papa that he had nothing to fear, Jacques, en
grand seigneur, offered him his hospitality, here, at Charmerace,
for three weeks."
"Oh, he's all right in that way, little as he cares about society,"
said Germaine. "Well, by a miracle my father got cured of his
rheumatism here. Jacques fell in love with me; papa made up his mind
to buy the chateau; and I demanded the hand of Jacques in marriage."
"You did? But you were only sixteen then," said Marie, with some
surprise.
"Romantic? Oh, yes," said Germaine; and she pouted. "But between
ourselves, if I'd known that he was going to stay all that time at
the South Pole--"
"That's true," broke in Marie. "To go away for three years and stay
away seven--at the end of the world."
"Well, you ARE twenty-three. It's the flower of one's age," said
Jeanne.
"Dead? Oh, how unhappy you must have been!" said Sonia.
"Oh, don't speak of it! For six months I daren't put on a light
frock," said Germaine, turning to her.
"A lot she must have cared for him," whispered Jeanne to Marie.
"Fortunately, one fine day, the letters began again. Three months
ago a telegram informed us that he was coming back; and at last the
Duke returned," said Germaine, with a theatrical air.
"Never mind. Fancy waiting nearly seven years for one's fiance. That
was constancy," said Sonia.
"Oh, to own the castle of Charmerace and call oneself Mlle. Gournay-
Martin--it's not worth doing. One MUST become a duchess," said
Jeanne.
"Yes, yes; and for all this wonderful constancy, seven years of it,
Germaine was on the point of becoming engaged to another man," said
Marie, smiling.
"Didn't you know, Mlle. Kritchnoff? She nearly became engaged to the
Duke's cousin, the Baron de Relzieres. It was not nearly so grand."
"Oh, it's all very well to laugh at me; but being the cousin and
heir of the Duke, Relzieres would have assumed the title, and I
should have been Duchess just the same," said Germaine triumphantly.
"Evidently that was all that mattered," said Jeanne. "Well, dear, I
must be off. We've promised to run in to see the Comtesse de
Grosjean. You know the Comtesse de Grosjean?"
"Only by name. Papa used to know her husband on the Stock Exchange
when he was still called simply M. Grosjean. For his part, papa
preferred to keep his name intact," said Germaine, with quiet pride.
"Intact? That's one way of looking at it. Well, then, I'll see you
in Paris. You still intend to start to-morrow?" said Jeanne.
As she closed the door on them, Germaine turned to Sonia, and said:
"I do hate those two girls! They're such horrible snobs."
CHAPTER II
Sonia went back to her table, and once more began putting wedding-
cards in their envelopes and addressing them. Germaine moved
restlessly about the room, fidgeting with the bric-a-brac on the
cabinets, shifting the pieces about, interrupting Sonia to ask
whether she preferred this arrangement or that, throwing herself
into a chair to read a magazine, getting up in a couple of minutes
to straighten a picture on the wall, throwing out all the while idle
questions not worth answering. Ninety-nine human beings would have
been irritated to exasperation by her fidgeting; Sonia endured it
with a perfect patience. Five times Germaine asked her whether she
should wear her heliotrope or her pink gown at a forthcoming dinner
at Madame de Relzieres'. Five times Sonia said, without the
slightest variation in her tone, "I think you look better in the
pink." And all the while the pile of addressed envelopes rose
steadily.
"A gentleman in the prime of life and a younger one?" said Germaine.
"Yes, miss."
"Yes, miss. And have you any orders for me to give Victoire when we
get to Paris?" said Alfred.
"Yes, miss. We're all going by the seven o'clock train. It's a long
way from here to Paris; we shall only reach it at nine in the
morning. That will give us just time to get the house ready for you
by the time you get there to-morrow evening," said Alfred.
"Yes, miss--everything. The cart has already taken the heavy luggage
to the station. All you'll have to do is to see after your bags."
"That's all right. Show M. du Buit and his brother in," said
Germaine.
As she leant her head at a charming angle back against the tall back
of the chair, her eyes fell on the window, and they opened wide.
"Whatever's what?" said Sonia, without raising her eyes from the
envelope she was addressing.
"Why, the window. Look! one of the panes has been taken out. It
looks as if it had been cut."
"So it has--just at the level of the fastening," said Sonia. And the
two girls stared at the gap.
"No; the broken glass must have fallen outside," said Sonia.
The noise of the opening of the door drew their attention from the
window. Two figures were advancing towards them--a short, round,
tubby man of fifty-five, red-faced, bald, with bright grey eyes,
which seemed to be continually dancing away from meeting the eyes of
any other human being. Behind him came a slim young man, dark and
grave. For all the difference in their colouring, it was clear that
they were father and son: their eyes were set so close together. The
son seemed to have inherited, along with her black eyes, his
mother's nose, thin and aquiline; the nose of the father started
thin from the brow, but ended in a scarlet bulb eloquent of an
exhaustive acquaintance with the vintages of the world.
The elder man, advancing with a smiling bonhomie, bowed, and said in
an adenoid voice, ingratiating of tone: "I'm M. Charolais, young
ladies--M. Charolais--retired brewer--chevalier of the Legion of
Honour--landowner at Rennes. Let me introduce my son." The young man
bowed awkwardly. "We came from Rennes this morning, and we lunched
at Kerlor's farm."
"We asked to see your father," said M. Charolais, smiling with broad
amiability, while his eyes danced across her face, avoiding any
meeting with hers. "The footman told us that M. Gournay-Martin was
out, but that his daughter was at home. And we were unable, quite
unable, to deny ourselves the pleasure of meeting you." With that he
sat down; and his son followed his example.
"Yes; but excuse me, what is it you have called about?" said
Germaine.
M. Charolais crossed his legs, leant back in his chair, thrust his
thumbs into the arm-holes of his waistcoat, and said: "Well, we've
come about the advertisement we saw in the RENNES ADVERTISER, that
M. Gournay-Martin wanted to get rid of a motor-car; and my son is
always saying to me, 'I should like a motor-car which rushes the
hills, papa.' He means a sixty horse-power."
"We've got a sixty horse-power; but it's not for sale. My father is
even using it himself to-day," said Germaine.
"Perhaps it's the car we saw in the stable-yard," said M. Charolais.
The two girls rose, went to a table set against the wall beyond the
window, and began turning over the papers with which it was loaded
in the search for the photograph. They had barely turned their
backs, when the hand of young Charolais shot out as swiftly as the
tongue of a lizard catching a fly, closed round the silver statuette
on the top of the cabinet beside him, and flashed it into his jacket
pocket.
Charolais was watching the two girls; one would have said that he
had eyes for nothing else, yet, without moving a muscle of his face,
set in its perpetual beaming smile, he hissed in an angry whisper,
"Drop it, you idiot! Put it back!"
The young man's arm shot out with the same quickness, and the
statuette stood in its place.
M. Charolais rose, and said: "Very good. We will go now, and come
back presently. I'm sorry to have intruded on you, young ladies--
taking up your time like this--"
"And the Du Buits have not come either," said Sonia. "But it's
hardly five yet."
"Yes; that's so. The Du Buits have not come either. What on earth
are you wasting your time for?" she added sharply, raising her
voice. "Just finish addressing those letters while you're waiting."
"Nearly isn't quite. Get on with them, can't you!" snapped Germaine.
Germaine dropped into a chair for twenty seconds; then flung out of
it.
"Ten minutes to five!" she cried. "Jacques is late. It's the first
time I've ever known him late."
She went to the window, and looked across the wide stretch of
meadow-land and woodland on which the chateau, set on the very crown
of the ridge, looked down. The road, running with the irritating
straightness of so many of the roads of France, was visible for a
full three miles. It was empty.
Sonia stared through her without seeing her. Her face was a dead
white--fear had chilled the lustre from her skin; her breath panted
through her parted lips; and her dilated eyes seemed to look on some
dreadful picture.
Germaine did not hear her; she was staring at herself in a mirror,
and bridling to her own image.
Sonia tottered to the window and stared down at the road along which
must come the tidings of weal or irremediable woe. She kept passing
her hand over her eyes as if to clear their vision.
Suddenly she started, and bent forward, rigid, all her being
concentrated in the effort to see.
"A horseman! Look! There!" said Sonia, waving a hand towards the
road.
"Well, he gets here just in time for tea," said Germaine in a tone
of extreme satisfaction. "He knows that I hate to be kept waiting.
He said to me, 'I shall be back by five at the latest.' And here he
is."
"It's impossible," said Sonia. "He has to go all the way round the
park. There's no direct road; the brook is between us."
It was true. The horseman had left the road and was galloping across
the meadows straight for the brook. In twenty seconds he reached its
treacherous bank, and as he set his horse at it, Sonia covered her
eyes.
"He's over!" said Germaine. "My father gave three hundred guineas
for that horse."
CHAPTER III
LUPIN'S WAY
"If it's for me, plenty of tea, very little cream, and three lumps
of sugar," he cried in a gay, ringing voice, and pulled out his
watch. "Five to the minute--that's all right." And he bent down,
took Germaine's hand, and kissed it with an air of gallant devotion.
He drew a chair near the tea-table for Germaine; sat down himself;
and Sonia handed him a cup of tea with so shaky a hand that the
spoon clinked in the saucer.
"Yes. But it isn't true. You've been fighting about some woman,"
said Germaine petulantly.
"If I had been fighting about a woman, it could only be you," said
the Duke.
"Oh, the reason of it was entirely childish," said the Duke. "I was
in a bad temper; and De Relzieres said something that annoyed me."
"Yes. But if I had been killed, everybody would have said, 'The Duke
of Charmerace has been killed in a duel about Mademoiselle Gournay-
Martin.' That would have sounded very fine indeed," said the Duke;
and a touch of mockery had crept into his voice.
"The last thing I should dream of, my dear girl," said the Duke,
smiling.
"Poor dear De Relzieres: he won't be out of bed for the next six
months," said the Duke; and he laughed lightly and gaily.
He finished his tea; then he took a morocco case from his pocket,
and said to Germaine, "It must be quite three days since I gave you
anything."
He opened the case, disclosed a pearl pendant, and handed it to her.
She took it from the case, saying that it was a beauty. She showed
it to Sonia; then she put it on and stood before a mirror admiring
the effect. To tell the truth, the effect was not entirely
desirable. The pearls did not improve the look of her rather coarse
brown skin; and her skin added nothing to the beauty of the pearls.
Sonia saw this, and so did the Duke. He looked at Sonia's white
throat. She met his eyes and blushed. She knew that the same thought
was in both their minds; the pearls would have looked infinitely
better there.
The Duke said idly: "Goodness! Are all those invitations to the
wedding?"
"If I were you, I should have careful arrangements made," said the
Duke.
"Nice? It's shocking! We're making the most appalling faces," said
Germaine, looking at the photograph in his hand.
"Well, perhaps you ARE making faces," said the Duke seriously,
considering the photograph with grave earnestness. "But they're not
appalling faces--not by any means. You shall be judge, Mademoiselle
Sonia. The faces--well, we won't talk about the faces--but the
outlines. Look at the movement of your scarf." And he handed the
photograph to Sonia.
"Oh, yes, you've something important to tell me. What is it?" said
the Duke, with an air of resignation; and he took the photograph
from Sonia and put it carefully back in his pocket.
"Victoire has telephoned from Paris to say that we've had a paper-
knife and a Louis Seize inkstand given us," said Germaine.
"Hurrah!" cried the Duke in a sudden shout that made them both jump.
"I beg your pardon. This pearl necklace is from one of your father's
friends, isn't it?" said the Duke.
"But the inkstand and the paper-knife must be from the Faubourg
Saint-Germain, and well on the shabby side?" said the Duke.
"Yes; well?"
"Well then, my dear girl, what are you complaining about? They
balance; the equilibrium is restored. You can't have everything,"
said the Duke; and he laughed mischievously.
"Wait till we're married for that, my dear girl," said the Duke; and
he laughed again, with a blithe, boyish cheerfulness, which deepened
the angry flush in Germaine's cheeks.
The Duke walked up and down the hall, looking at the pictures of
some of his ancestors--somewhat grotesque persons--with humorous
appreciation. Between addressing the envelopes Sonia kept glancing
at him. Once he caught her eye, and smiled at her. Germaine's back
was eloquent of her displeasure. The Duke stopped at a gap in the
line of pictures in which there hung a strip of old tapestry.
"I can never understand why you have left all these ancestors of
mine staring from the walls and have taken away the quite admirable
and interesting portrait of myself," he said carelessly.
Germaine turned sharply from the window; Sonia stopped in the middle
of addressing an envelope; and both the girls stared at him in
astonishment.
"We wrote all the details to you and sent you all the papers three
years ago. Didn't you get them?" said Germaine.
"But it was most dramatic, my dear Jacques. All Paris was talking of
it," said Germaine. "Your portrait was stolen."
She drew aside the piece of tapestry, and in the middle of the panel
over which the portrait of the Duke had hung he saw written in chalk
the words:
ARSENE LUPIN
"He left his signature. It seems that he always does so," said Sonia
in an explanatory tone.
"Arsene Lupin? Surely you know who Arsene Lupin is?" said Germaine
impatiently.
"Not even enough to ask him to lunch at a restaurant," said the Duke
flippantly. "What's he like?"
"But if nobody knows him, how did they learn that?" said the Duke,
with a puzzled air.
"Because the second evening, about ten o'clock, they noticed that
one of the guests had disappeared, and with him all the jewels of
the ambassadress."
"Yes; and Lupin left his card behind him with these words scribbled
on it:"
"No, your Grace; and he has done better than that. You remember the
affair of the Daray Bank--the savings bank for poor people?" said
Sonia, her gentle face glowing with a sudden enthusiastic animation.
"Let's see," said the Duke. "Wasn't that the financier who doubled
his fortune at the expense of a heap of poor wretches and ruined two
thousand people?"
"Yes; that's the man," said Sonia. "And Lupin stripped Daray's house
and took from him everything he had in his strong-box. He didn't
leave him a sou of the money. And then, when he'd taken it from him,
he distributed it among all the poor wretches whom Daray had
ruined."
"Well," said the Duke, with an air of profound reflection, "if you
come to think of it, that robbery was not worthy of this national
hero. My portrait, if you except the charm and beauty of the face
itself, is not worth much."
"If you think he was satisfied with your portrait, you're very much
mistaken. All my father's collections were robbed," said Germaine.
"That's exactly it--he was too careful of them. That's why Lupin
succeeded."
"Oh, come! what on earth do you mean?" said the Duke. "You're
getting quite incomprehensible, my dear girl."
"DEAR SIR,"
"ARSENE LUPIN."
"Laugh?" said Germaine. "You should have seen his face. He took it
seriously enough, I can tell you."
"Not to the point of forwarding the things to Batignolles, I hope,"
said the Duke.
"No, but to the point of being driven wild," said Germaine. "And
since the police had always been baffled by Lupin, he had the
brilliant idea of trying what soldiers could do. The Commandant at
Rennes is a great friend of papa's; and papa went to him, and told
him about Lupin's letter and what he feared. The colonel laughed at
him; but he offered him a corporal and six soldiers to guard his
collection, on the night of the seventh. It was arranged that they
should come from Rennes by the last train so that the burglars
should have no warning of their coming. Well, they came, seven
picked men--men who had seen service in Tonquin. We gave them
supper; and then the corporal posted them in the hall and the two
drawing-rooms where the pictures and things were. At eleven we all
went to bed, after promising the corporal that, in the event of any
fight with the burglars, we would not stir from our rooms. I can
tell you I felt awfully nervous. I couldn't get to sleep for ages
and ages. Then, when I did, I did not wake till morning. The night
had passed absolutely quietly. Nothing out of the common had
happened. There had not been the slightest noise. I awoke Sonia and
my father. We dressed as quickly as we could, and rushed down to the
drawing-room."
"Oh, no. That was at the Bank of France. And it was doubtless to
make up for not getting it that Lupin stole your portrait. At any
rate he didn't say that he was going to steal it in his letter."
"I don't understand," said the Duke. "The colonel promised your
father a corporal and six men. Didn't they come?"
"They came to the railway station all right," said Germaine. "But
you know the little inn half-way between the railway station and the
chateau? They stopped to drink there, and at eleven o'clock next
morning one of the villagers found all seven of them, along with the
footman who was guiding them to the chateau, sleeping like logs in
the little wood half a mile from the inn. Of course the innkeeper
could not explain when their wine was drugged. He could only tell us
that a motorist, who had stopped at the inn to get some supper, had
called the soldiers in and insisted on standing them drinks. They
had seemed a little fuddled before they left the inn, and the
motorist had insisted on driving them to the chateau in his car.
When the drug took effect he simply carried them out of it one by
one, and laid them in the wood to sleep it off."
"Lupin seems to have made a thorough job of it, anyhow," said the
Duke.
"I should think so," said Germaine. "Guerchard was sent down from
Paris; but he could not find a single clue. It was not for want of
trying, for he hates Lupin. It's a regular fight between them, and
so far Lupin has scored every point."
"I'm not joking," said Germaine. "Odd things are happening. Some one
has been changing the place of things. That silver statuette now--it
was on the cabinet, and we found it moved to the piano. Yet nobody
had touched it. And look at this window. Some one has broken a pane
in it just at the height of the fastening."
CHAPTER IV
The Duke rose, came to the window, and looked at the broken pane. He
stepped out on to the terrace and looked at the turf; then he came
back into the room.
"This looks serious," he said. "That pane has not been broken at
all. If it had been broken, the pieces of glass would be lying on
the turf. It has been cut out. We must warn your father to look to
his treasures."
"I told you so," said Germaine. "I said that Arsene Lupin was in the
neighbourhood."
"Arsene Lupin is a very capable man," said the Duke, smiling. "But
there's no reason to suppose that he's the only burglar in France or
even in Ile-et-Vilaine."
He came back into the hall, and as he did so the door opened and a
shock-headed man in the dress of a gamekeeper stood on the
threshold.
"They are two gentlemen. I don't know what their names are. I've no
memory for names."
"That's an advantage to any one who answers doors," said the Duke,
smiling at the stolid Firmin.
"Well, it can't be the two Charolais again. It's not time for them
to come back. I told them papa would not be back yet," said
Germaine.
Firmin went out, leaving the door open behind him; and they heard
his hob-nailed boots clatter and squeak on the stone floor of the
outer hall.
"Charolais?" said the Duke idly. "I don't know the name. Who are
they?"
"A little while ago Alfred announced two gentlemen. I thought they
were Georges and Andre du Buit, for they promised to come to tea. I
told Alfred to show them in, and to my surprise there appeared two
horrible provincials. I never--Oh!"
She stopped short, for there, coming through the door, were the two
Charolais, father and son.
His son bowed, and revealed behind him another young man.
"My second son. He has a chemist's shop," said M. Charolais, waving
a large red hand at the young man.
The young man, also blessed with the family eyes, set close
together, entered the hall and bowed to the two girls. The Duke
raised his eyebrows ever so slightly.
"I'm very sorry, gentlemen," said Germaine, "but my father has not
yet returned."
"I'm sorry," said the Duke, "but I have nothing to do with it."
Before M. Charolais could reply the door opened, and Firmin's deep
voice said:
"What, you here, Bernard?" said M. Charolais. "I told you to wait at
the park gates."
"My third son. He is destined for the Bar," said M. Charolais, with
a great air of paternal pride.
As she spoke she moved towards the door. M. Charolais and his sons
rose and made way for her. The father and the two eldest sons made
haste to follow her out of the room. But Bernard lingered behind,
apparently to admire the bric-a-brac on the cabinets. With infinite
quickness he grabbed two objects off the nearest, and followed his
brothers. The Duke sprang across the hall in three strides, caught
him by the arm on the very threshold, jerked him back into the hall,
and shut the door.
The Duke grasped the young man's left wrist, plunged his hand into
the motor-cap which he was carrying, drew out of it a silver
cigarette-case, and held it before his eyes.
Bernard turned pale to the lips. His frightened eyes seemed about to
leap from their sockets.
The Duke shifted his grip to his collar, and thrust his hand into
the breast-pocket of his coat. Bernard, helpless in his grip, and
utterly taken aback by his quickness, made no resistance.
The Duke drew out a morocco case, and said: "Is this a mistake too?"
"Heavens! The pendant!" cried Sonia, who was watching the scene with
parted lips and amazed eyes.
The Duke hesitated, and looked down on him, frowning and pulling at
his moustache. Then, more quickly than one would have expected from
so careless a trifler, his mind was made up.
"All right," he said slowly. "Just for this once . . . be off with
you." And he jerked him to his feet and almost threw him into the
outer hall.
The Duke shut the door and looked at Sonia, breathing quickly.
"Well? Did you ever see anything like that? That young fellow will
go a long way. The cheek of the thing! Right under our very eyes!
And this pendant, too: it would have been a pity to lose it. Upon my
word, I ought to have handed him over to the police."
"No, no!" cried Sonia. "You did quite right to let him off--quite
right,"
The Duke set the pendant on the ledge of the bureau, and came down
the hall to Sonia.
"It has upset me . . . that unfortunate boy," said Sonia; and her
eyes were swimming with tears.
"Yes; it's dreadful. His eyes were so terrified, and so boyish. And,
to be caught like that . . . stealing . . . in the act. Oh, it's
hateful!"
"Come, come, how sensitive you are!" said the Duke, in a soothing,
almost caressing tone. His eyes, resting on her charming, troubled
face, were glowing with a warm admiration.
"Yes; it's silly," said Sonia; "but you noticed his eyes--the hunted
look in them? You pitied him, didn't you? For you are kind at
bottom."
"Oh, I said at bottom because you look sarcastic, and at first sight
you're so cold. But often that's only the mask of those who have
suffered the most. . . . They are the most indulgent," said Sonia
slowly, hesitating, picking her words.
"It's because when one has suffered one understands. . . . Yes: one
understands," said Sonia.
There was a pause. The Duke's eyes still rested on her face. The
admiration in them was mingled with compassion.
"Your smile is so sad, and your eyes so timid," said the Duke
slowly. "You're just like a little child one longs to protect. Are
you quite alone in the world?"
His eyes and tones were full of pity; and a faint flush mantled
Sonia's cheeks.
"No," said Sonia, with a faint smile, "I don't mind having no
relations. I grew used to that so young . . . so very young. But
what is hard--but you'll laugh at me--"
She paused, and then added gravely: "But I tell myself that it's
nonsense. I have a certain amount of philosophy."
As they stood looking at one another with serious eyes, almost with
eyes that probed one another's souls, the drawing-room door flung
open, and Germaine's harsh voice broke on their ears.
"Oh, there's no need to bother about it. I'll see after it myself,"
said Germaine. "But upon my word, you might be one of our guests,
seeing how easily you take things. You're negligence personified."
She flung out of the room, and slammed the door behind her.
Sonia seemed entirely unmoved by the outburst: no flush of
mortification stained her cheeks, her lips did not quiver. She
stooped to pick up the fallen papers.
"No, no; let me, I beg you," said the Duke, in a tone of distress.
And dropping on one knee, he began to gather together the fallen
papers. He set them on the table, and then he said: "You mustn't
mind what Germaine says. She's--she's--she's all right at heart.
It's her manner. She's always been happy, and had everything she
wanted. She's been spoiled, don't you know. Those kind of people
never have any consideration for any one else. You mustn't let her
outburst hurt you."
"I'm glad of that," said the Duke. "It isn't really worth noticing."
He drew the envelopes and unused cards into a packet, and handed
them to her.
"There!" he said, with a smile. "That won't be too heavy for you."
CHAPTER V
The Duke stood for a while staring thoughtfully at the door through
which Sonia had passed, a faint smile playing round his lips. He
crossed the hall to the Chippendale bureau, took a cigarette from a
box which stood on the ledge of it, beside the morocco case which
held the pendant, lighted it, and went slowly out on to the terrace.
He crossed it slowly, paused for a moment on the edge of it, and
looked across the stretch of country with musing eyes, which saw
nothing of its beauty. Then he turned to the right, went down a
flight of steps to the lower terrace, crossed the lawn, and took a
narrow path which led into the heart of a shrubbery of tall
deodoras. In the middle of it he came to one of those old stone
benches, moss-covered and weather-stained, which adorn the gardens
of so many French chateaux. It faced a marble basin from which rose
the slender column of a pattering fountain. The figure of a Cupid
danced joyously on a tall pedestal to the right of the basin. The
Duke sat down on the bench, and was still, with that rare stillness
which only comes of nerves in perfect harmony, his brow knitted in
careful thought. Now and again the frown cleared from his face, and
his intent features relaxed into a faint smile, a smile of pleasant
memory. Once he rose, walked round the fountains frowning, came back
to the bench, and sat down again. The early September dusk was upon
him when at last he rose and with quick steps took his way through
the shrubbery, with the air of a man whose mind, for good or ill,
was at last made up.
When he came on to the upper terrace his eyes fell on a group which
stood at the further corner, near the entrance of the chateau, and
he sauntered slowly up to it.
The millionaire was waving his hands and roaring after the manner of
a man who has cultivated the art of brow-beating those with whom he
does business; and as the Duke neared the group, he caught the
words:
"No; that's the lowest I'll take. Take it or leave it. You can say
Yes, or you can say Good-bye; and I don't care a hang which."
"Dear!" roared M. Gournay-Martin. "I should like to see any one else
sell a hundred horse-power car for eight hundred pounds. Why, my
good sir, you're having me!"
"Come, come! You're too sharp, that's what you are. But don't say
any more till you've tried the car."
"No business success of yours could surprise me," said the Duke
blandly, with a faint, ironical smile.
"The car's four years old," he said joyfully. "He'll give me eight
hundred for it, and it's not worth a pipe of tobacco. And eight
hundred pounds is just the price of a little Watteau I've had my eye
on for some time--a first-class investment."
They strolled down the terrace, and through one of the windows into
the hall. Firmin had lighted the lamps, two of them. They made but a
small oasis of light in a desert of dim hall. The millionaire let
himself down very gingerly into an Empire chair, as if he feared,
with excellent reason, that it might collapse under his weight.
"Yes. The decree will be signed to-morrow. You can consider yourself
decorated. I hope you feel a happy man," said the millionaire,
rubbing his fat hands together with prodigious satisfaction.
"As for me, I'm delighted--delighted," said the millionaire. "I was
extremely keen on your being decorated. After that, and after a
volume or two of travels, and after you've published your
grandfather's letters with a good introduction, you can begin to
think of the Academy."
"The Academy!" said the Duke, startled from his usual coolness. "But
I've no title to become an Academician."
"How, no title?" said the millionaire solemnly; and his little eyes
opened wide. "You're a duke."
"There's no doubt about that," said the Duke, watching him with
admiring curiosity.
"What are you laughing at?" said the millionaire, and a sudden
lowering gloom overspread his beaming face.
"I've startled you, have I? I thought I should. It's true that I'm
full of surprises. It's my knowledge. I understand so much. I
understand business, and I love art, pictures, a good bargain, bric-
a-brac, fine tapestry. They're first-class investments. Yes,
certainly I do love the beautiful. And I don't want to boast, but I
understand it. I have taste, and I've something better than taste; I
have a flair, the dealer's flair."
"And yet you haven't seen the finest thing I have--the coronet of
the Princesse de Lamballe. It's worth half a million francs."
"So I've heard," said the Duke, a little wearily. "I don't wonder
that Arsene Lupin envied you it."
"What's the matter?" said the Duke, jumping in his chair at the
sudden, startling burst of sound.
There was a crash. The Duke had a vision of huge arms and legs
waving in the air as the chair-back gave. There was another crash.
The chair collapsed. The huge bulk banged to the floor.
He ran his eyes over it, and they grew larger and larger--they grew
almost of an average size.
"DEAR SIR,"
"ARSENE LUPIN."
To judge from the blackness of his face, and the way he staggered
and dropped on to a couch, which was fortunately stronger than the
chair, he was speaking the truth.
"Firmin! Firmin!" shouted the Duke. "A glass of water! Quick! Your
master's ill."
He rushed to the side of the millionaire, who gasped: "Telephone!
Telephone to the Prefecture of Police! Be quick!"
The Duke loosened his collar with deft fingers; tore a Van Loo fan
from its case hanging on the wall, and fanned him furiously. Firmin
came clumping into the room with a glass of water in his hand.
The drawing-room door opened, and Germaine and Sonia, alarmed by the
Duke's shout, hurried in.
Sonia ran across the hall, opened one of the drawers in the Oriental
cabinet, and ran to the millionaire with a large bottle of smelling-
salts in her hand. The Duke took it from her, and applied it to the
millionaire's nose. The millionaire sneezed thrice with terrific
violence. The Duke snatched the glass from Firmin and dashed the
water into his host's purple face. The millionaire gasped and
spluttered.
"It's this letter," said the Duke. "A letter from Lupin."
"I told you so--I said that Lupin was in the neighbourhood," cried
Germaine triumphantly.
He jumped up, caught the gamekeeper by the shoulder, and shook him
furiously.
"This letter. Where did it come from? Who brought it?" he roared.
"Now, come, it's no use losing your head," said the Duke, with quiet
firmness. "If this letter isn't a hoax--"
"Very good," said the Duke. "But if this robbery with which you're
threatened is genuine, it's just childish."
"How?" said the millionaire.
"One of two things," said the Duke. "Either it's a hoax, and we
needn't bother about it; or the threat is genuine, and we have the
time to stop the robbery." "Of course we have. Whatever was I
thinking of?" said the millionaire. And his anguish cleared from his
face.
"For once in a way our dear Lupin's fondness for warning people will
have given him a painful jar," said the Duke.
"No good! Why?" roared the millionaire, dashing heavily across the
room to it.
"Look at the time," said Sonia; "the telephone doesn't work as late
as this. It's Sunday."
"But that doesn't matter. You can always telegraph," said Germaine.
"But you can't. It's impossible," said Sonia. "You can't get a
message through. It's Sunday; and the telegraph offices shut at
twelve o'clock."
"Hang it all!" said the Duke. "There must be some way out of the
difficulty."
The Duke did not answer. He put his hands in his pockets and walked
impatiently up and down the hall. Germaine sat down on a chair.
Sonia put her hands on the back of a couch, and leaned forward,
watching him. Firmin stood by the door, whither he had retired to be
out of the reach of his excited master, with a look of perplexity on
his stolid face. They all watched the Duke with the air of people
waiting for an oracle to deliver its message. The millionaire kept
mopping the beads of anguish from his brow. The more he thought of
his impending loss, the more freely he perspired. Germaine's maid,
Irma, came to the door leading into the outer hall, which Firmin,
according to his usual custom, had left open, and peered in wonder
at the silent group.
"I have it!" cried the Duke at last. "There is a way out."
"What is it?" said the millionaire, rising and coming to the middle
of the hall.
"What time is it?" said the Duke, pulling out his watch.
The millionaire pulled out his watch. Germaine pulled out hers.
Firmin, after a struggle, produced from some pocket difficult of
access an object not unlike a silver turnip. There was a brisk
dispute between Germaine and the millionaire about which of their
watches was right. Firmin, whose watch apparently did not agree with
the watch of either of them, made his deep voice heard above theirs.
The Duke came to the conclusion that it must be a few minutes past
seven.
"Oh, but it's nonsense, papa; we shall get there before the
servants," said Germaine pettishly. "Think of arriving at an empty
house in the dead of night."
"Nonsense!" said the millionaire. "Hurry off and get ready. Your bag
ought to be packed. Where are my keys? Sonia, where are my keys--the
keys of the Paris house?"
"Well, see that I don't go without them. Now hurry up. Firmin, go
and tell Jean that we shall want both cars. I will drive one, the
Duke the other. Jean must stay with you and help guard the chateau."
So saying he bustled out of the hall, driving the two girls before
him.
CHAPTER VI
Hardly had the door closed behind the millionaire when the head of
M. Charolais appeared at one of the windows opening on to the
terrace. He looked round the empty hall, whistled softly, and
stepped inside. Inside of ten seconds his three sons came in through
the windows, and with them came Jean, the millionaire's chauffeur.
"Take the door into the outer hall, Jean," said M. Charolais, in a
low voice. "Bernard, take that door into the drawing-room. Pierre
and Louis, help me go through the drawers. The whole family is going
to Paris, and if we're not quick we shan't get the cars."
"What harm can the letter do, you fool?" said M. Charolais. "It's
Sunday. We want them knocked silly for to-morrow, to get hold of the
coronet. Oh, to get hold of that coronet! It must be in Paris. I've
been ransacking this chateau for hours."
Jean opened the door of the outer hall half an inch, and glued his
eyes to it. Bernard had done the same with the door opening into the
drawing-room. M. Charolais, Pierre, and Louis were opening drawers,
ransacking them, and shutting them with infinite quickness and
noiselessly.
"That plain thing with the brass handles in the middle on the left--
that's a bureau," said Bernard softly.
"Quick! Here's that fat old fool!" said Jean, in a hoarse, hissing
whisper.
He moved down the hall, blowing out one of the lamps as he passed
it. In the seventh drawer lay a bunch of keys. M. Charolais snatched
it up, glanced at it, took a bunch of keys from his own pocket, put
it in the drawer, closed it, closed the flap, and rushed to the
window. Jean and his sons were already out on the terrace.
M. Charolais was still a yard from the window when the door into the
outer hall opened and in came M. Gournay-Martin.
He ran blundering down the hall, tangled his feet in the fragments
of the broken chair, and came sprawling a thundering cropper, which
knocked every breath of wind out of his capacious body. He lay flat
on his face for a couple of minutes, his broad back wriggling
convulsively--a pathetic sight!--in the painful effort to get his
breath back. Then he sat up, and with perfect frankness burst into
tears. He sobbed and blubbered, like a small child that has hurt
itself, for three or four minutes. Then, having recovered his
magnificent voice, he bellowed furiously: "Firmin! Firmin!
Charmerace! Charmerace!"
Then he rose painfully to his feet, and stood staring at the open
windows.
The Duke came quietly into the hall, dressed in a heavy motor-coat,
his motor-cap on his head, and carrying a kit-bag in his hand.
"Call?" said the millionaire. "I shouted. The burglars are here
already. I've just seen one of them. He was bolting through the
middle window."
"Nerves be hanged!" said the millionaire. "I tell you I saw him as
plainly as I see you."
"Well, you can't see me at all, seeing that you're lighting an acre
and a half of hall with a single lamp," said the Duke, still in a
tone of utter incredulity.
"Well, we may as well shut the windows, anyhow," said the Duke,
proceeding to do so. "If you think Firmin would be any good, you
might post him in this hall with a gun to-night. There could be no
harm in putting a charge of small shot into the legs of these
ruffians. He has only to get one of them, and the others will go for
their lives. Yet I don't like leaving you and Germaine in this big
house with only Firmin to look after you."
"I shouldn't like it myself, and I'm not going to chance it,"
growled the millionaire. "We're going to motor to Paris along with
you, and leave Jean to help Firmin fight these burglars. Firmin's
all right--he's an old soldier. He fought in '70. Not that I've much
belief in soldiers against this cursed Lupin, after the way he dealt
with that corporal and his men three years ago."
"I'm glad you're coming to Paris," said the Duke. "It'll be a weight
off my mind. I'd better drive the limousine, and you take the
landaulet."
"No, I'll take Irma and Germaine," said the millionaire. "Germaine
would prefer to have Irma with her, in case you had an accident. She
wouldn't like to get to Paris and have to find a fresh maid."
"I think it's extremely tiresome your dragging us off to Paris like
this in the middle of the night," said Germaine pettishly.
"He was greenish-pink, slightly tinged with yellow," said the Duke
softly.
"It was the dim light which made your father see him in those
colours. In a bright light, I think he would have been an Alsatian
blue," said the Duke suavely.
"Oh, stop your idiotic jokes! We're all sick to death of them!" said
Germaine, with something of the fine fury which so often
distinguished her father.
"There are times for all things," said the millionaire solemnly.
"And I must say that, with the fate of my collection and of the
coronet trembling in the balance, this does not seem to me a season
for idle jests."
"My keys, Sonia--the keys of the Paris house," said the millionaire.
Sonia took her own keys from her pocket and went to the bureau. She
slipped a key into the lock and tried to turn it. It would not turn;
and she bent down to look at it.
"Why--why, some one's been tampering with the lock! It's broken!"
she cried.
"I told you I'd seen a burglar!" cried the millionaire triumphantly.
"He was after the keys."
Sonia drew back the flap of the bureau and hastily pulled open the
drawer in which the keys had been.
"They're here!" she cried, taking them out of the drawer and holding
them up.
"Then I was just in time," said the millionaire. "I startled him in
the very act of stealing the keys."
"I withdraw! I withdraw!" said the Duke. "You did see a burglar,
evidently. But still I believe he was greenish-pink. They often are.
However, you'd better give me those keys, Mademoiselle Sonia, since
I'm to get to Paris first. I should look rather silly if, when I got
there, I had to break into the house to catch the burglars."
Sonia handed the keys to the Duke. He contrived to take her little
hand, keys and all, into his own, as he received them, and squeezed
it. The light was too dim for the others to see the flush which
flamed in her face. She went back and stood beside the bureau.
"Now, papa, are you going to motor to Paris in a thin coat and linen
waistcoat? If we're going, we'd better go. You always do keep us
waiting half an hour whenever we start to go anywhere," said
Germaine firmly.
"Oh, well, you must make the best of it. At any rate you're well
wrapped up, and the night is warm enough, though it is raining,"
said the Duke. "Still, I could have wished that Lupin confined his
operations to fine weather." He paused, and added cheerfully, "But,
after all, it will lay the dust."
Suddenly he lost his bored air; his face lighted up; and he said
joyfully: "Of course, why didn't I think of it? Why should we start
from a pit of gloom like this? Let us have the proper illumination
which our enterprise deserves."
With that he set about lighting all the lamps in the hall. There
were lamps on stands, lamps on brackets, lamps on tables, and lamps
which hung from the roof--old-fashioned lamps with new reservoirs,
new lamps of what is called chaste design, brass lamps, silver
lamps, and lamps in porcelain. The Duke lighted them one after
another, patiently, missing none, with a cold perseverance. The
operation was punctuated by exclamations from Germaine. They were
all to the effect that she could not understand how he could be such
a fool. The Duke paid no attention whatever to her. His face
illumined with boyish glee, he lighted lamp after lamp.
The Duke had just lighted the twenty-second lamp when in bustled the
millionaire.
"But, my dear Duke!--my dear Duke! The oil!--the oil!" cried the
millionaire, in a tone of bitter distress. "Do you think it's my
object in life to swell the Rockefeller millions? We never have more
than six lamps burning unless we are holding a reception."
"I think it looks so cheerful," said the Duke, looking round on his
handiwork with a beaming smile of satisfaction. "But where are the
cars? Jean seems a deuce of a time bringing them round. Does he
expect us to go to the garage through this rain? We'd better hurry
him up. Come on; you've got a good carrying voice."
He caught the millionaire by the arm, hurried him through the outer
hall, opened the big door of the chateau, and said: "Now shout!"
The millionaire looked at him, shrugged his shoulders, and said:
"You don't beat about the bush when you want anything."
"Why should I?" said the Duke simply. "Shout, my good chap--shout!"
CHAPTER VII
The night was very black; the rain pattered in their faces.
No answer came out of the darkness, though his bellow echoed and re-
echoed among the out-buildings and stables away on the left.
He turned and looked at the Duke and said uneasily, "What on earth
can they be doing?"
"I can't conceive," said the Duke. "I suppose we must go and hunt
them out."
"If we don't, nobody else will," said the Duke. "And all the time
that rascal Lupin is stealing nearer and nearer your pictures. So
buck up, and come along!"
He seized the reluctant millionaire by the arm and drew him down the
steps. They took their way to the stables. A dim light shone from
the open door of the motor-house. The Duke went into it first, and
stopped short.
"What are you sitting there for? You idle dogs!" bellowed the
millionaire.
Neither of the men answered, nor did they stir. The light from the
lamp gleamed on their fixed eyes, which stared at their infuriated
master.
"What on earth is this?" said the Duke; and seizing the lamp which
stood beside the car, he raised it so that its light fell on the two
figures. Then it was clear what had happened: they were trussed like
two fowls, and gagged.
The Duke pulled a penknife from his pocket, opened the blade,
stepped into the car and set Firmin free. Firmin coughed and spat
and swore. The Duke cut the bonds of Jean.
"Well," said the Duke, in a tone of cutting irony, "what new game is
this? What have you been playing at?"
"Funny!" howled the millionaire. "Funny! Where does the fun come in?
What about my pictures and the coronet?"
The Duke laughed his laugh out; then changed on the instant to a man
of action.
"Well, this means a change in our plans," he said. "I must get to
Paris in this car here."
"It's such a rotten old thing," said the millionaire. "You'll never
do it."
"The train! Twelve hours in the train--with all those changes! You
don't mean that you will actually go to Paris by train?" said the
Duke.
"I do," said the millionaire. "Come along--I must go and tell
Germaine; there's no time to waste," and he hurried off to the
chateau.
"Get the lamps lighted, Jean, and make sure that the tank's full. As
for the engine, I must humour it and trust to luck. I'll get her to
Paris somehow," said the Duke.
When the Duke came into the great hall he found Germaine and her
father indulging in recriminations. She was declaring that nothing
would induce her to make the journey by train; her father was
declaring that she should. He bore down her opposition by the mere
force of his magnificent voice.
When at last there came a silence, Sonia said quietly: "But is there
a train? I know there's a train at midnight; but is there one
before?"
"Now, where did I see a time-table?" said the Duke. "Oh, I know;
there's one in the drawer of that Oriental cabinet." Crossing to the
cabinet, he opened the drawer, took out the time-table, and handed
it to M. Gournay-Martin.
The millionaire took it and turned over the leaves quickly, ran his
eye down a page, and said, "Yes, thank goodness, there is a train.
There's one at a quarter to nine."
"And what good is it to us? How are we to get to the station?" said
Germaine.
They looked at one another blankly. Firmin, who had followed the
Duke into the hall, came to the rescue.
"The very thing!" said the millionaire. "I'll drive it myself. Off
you go, Firmin; harness a horse to it."
It was perhaps as well that he went, for the Duke asked what time it
was; and since the watches of Germaine and her father differed
still, there ensued an altercation in which, had Firmin been there,
he would doubtless have taken part.
The Duke cut it short by saying: "Well, I don't think I'll wait to
see you start for the station. It won't take you more than half an
hour. The cart is light. You needn't start yet. I'd better get off
as soon as the car is ready. It isn't as though I could trust it."
"Of course there isn't a dining-car," snapped her father. "We must
eat something now, and take something with us."
"Sonia, Irma, quick! Be off to the larder and see what you can find.
Tell Mother Firmin to make an omelette. Be quick!"
The Duke opened the door of the hall for her; and as she went out,
she said anxiously, in a low voice: "Oh, do--do be careful. I hate
to think of your hurrying to Paris on a night like this. Please be
careful."
The honk of the motor-horn told him that Jean had brought the car to
the door of the chateau. He came down the room, kissed Germaine's
hands, shook hands with the millionaire, and bade them good-night.
Then he went out to the car. They heard it start; the rattle of it
grew fainter and fainter down the long avenue and died away.
There came a knock at the door, and Jean appeared on the threshold.
"His Grace told me that I was to come into the house, and help
Firmin look after it," he said.
They had nearly finished it when Jean came in, his gun on his arm,
to say that Firmin had harnessed the horse to the luggage-cart, and
it was awaiting them at the door of the chateau.
"Send him in to me, and stand by the horse till we come out," said
the millionaire.
Firmin did his best to look like an old soldier of France. He pulled
himself up out of the slouch which long years of loafing through
woods with a gun on his arm had given him. He lacked also the old
soldier of France's fiery gaze. His eyes were lack-lustre.
"Don't be afraid, sir. I saw the war of '70," said Firmin boldly,
rising to the occasion.
"Good!" said the millionaire. "I confide the chateau to you. I trust
you with my treasures."
The luggage-cart stood rather high, and they had to bring a chair
out of the hall to enable the girls to climb into it. Germaine did
not forget to give her real opinion of the advantages of a seat
formed by a plank resting on the sides of the cart. The millionaire
climbed heavily up in front, and took the reins.
"Never again will I trust only to motor-cars. The first thing I'll
do after I've made sure that my collections are safe will be to buy
carriages--something roomy," he said gloomily, as he realized the
discomfort of his seat.
He turned to Jean and Firmin, who stood on the steps of the chateau
watching the departure of their master, and said: "Sons of France,
be brave--be brave!"
Jean and Firmin watched it disappear into the darkness. Then they
came into the chateau and shut the door.
Firmin looked at Jean, and said gloomily: "I don't like this. These
burglars stick at nothing. They'd as soon cut your throat as look at
you."
"It can't be helped," said Jean. "Besides, you've got the post of
honour. You guard the hall. I'm to look after the drawing-rooms.
They're not likely to break in through the drawing-rooms. And I
shall lock the door between them and the hall."
"But I certainly will," said Jean. "You'd better come and get a
gun."
He shut the door and turned the key. Firmin stared at the decorated
panels blankly. The beauty of the scheme of decoration did not, at
the moment, move him to admiration.
He looked fearfully round the empty hall and at the windows, black
against the night. Under the patter of the rain he heard footsteps--
distinctly. He went hastily clumping down the hall, and along the
passage to the kitchen.
"My God!" he said. "I haven't been so frightened since '70." And he
mopped his glistening forehead with a dish-cloth. It was not a clean
dish-cloth; but he did not care.
"God save us!" said his wife. "You lock the door of that beastly
hall, and come into the kitchen. Burglars won't bother about the
kitchen."
"Let the master look after his treasures himself," said Madame
Firmin, with decision. "You've only one throat; and I'm not going to
have it cut. You sit down and eat your supper. Go and lock that door
first, though."
Firmin locked the door of the hall; then he locked the door of the
kitchen; then he sat down, and began to eat his supper. His appetite
was hearty, but none the less he derived little pleasure from the
meal. He kept stopping with the food poised on his fork, midway
between the plate and his mouth, for several seconds at a time,
while he listened with straining ears for the sound of burglars
breaking in the windows of the hall. He was much too far from those
windows to hear anything that happened to them, but that did not
prevent him from straining his ears. Madame Firmin ate her supper
with an air of perfect ease. She felt sure that burglars would not
bother with the kitchen.
He had described to his wife, with some ferocity, the cruel manner
in which he would annihilate the first three burglars who entered
the hall, and was proceeding to describe his method of dealing with
the fourth, when there came a loud knocking on the front door of the
chateau.
Stricken silent, turned to stone, Firmin sat with his mouth open, in
the midst of an unfinished word. Madame Firmin scuttled to the
kitchen door she had left unlocked on her return from the scullery,
and locked it. She turned, and they stared at one another.
The heavy knocker fell again and again and again. Between the
knocking there was a sound like the roaring of lions. Husband and
wife stared at one another with white faces. Firmin picked up his
gun with trembling hands, and the movement seemed to set his teeth
chattering. They chattered like castanets.
"Yes," said Madame Firmin. And she unlocked the thick door and
opened it a few inches.
"What the devil have you been doing?" bellowed the millionaire.
"What do you keep me standing in the rain for? Why didn't you let me
in?"
The millionaire turned the key, opened the door, and went into the
hall. Germaine followed him. She threw off her dripping coat, and
said with some heat: "I can't conceive why you didn't make sure that
there was a train at a quarter to nine. I will not go to Paris to-
night. Nothing shall induce me to take that midnight train!"
CHAPTER VIII
The morning was gloomy, and the police-station with its bare, white-
washed walls--their white expanse was only broken by notice-boards
to which were pinned portraits of criminals with details of their
appearance, their crime, and the reward offered for their
apprehension--with its shabby furniture, and its dingy fireplace,
presented a dismal and sordid appearance entirely in keeping with
the September grey. The inspector sat at his desk, yawning after a
night which had passed without an arrest. He was waiting to be
relieved. The policeman at the door and the two policemen sitting on
a bench by the wall yawned in sympathy.
At the name of Arsene Lupin the inspector sprang from his chair, the
policemen from their bench. On the instant they were wide awake,
attentive, full of zeal.
The Duke pulled off his glove, drew the letter from the breast-
pocket of his under-coat, and handed it to the inspector.
The inspector glanced through it, and said. "Yes, I know the
handwriting well." Then he read it carefully, and added, "Yes, yes:
it's his usual letter."
"Come along, your Grace-come along, you" said the inspector briskly.
The four of them hurried out of the office and down the steps of the
police-station. In the roadway stood a long grey racing-car, caked
with muds--grey mud, brown mud, red mud--from end to end. It looked
as if it had brought samples of the soil of France from many
districts.
"Come along; I'll take you in the car. Your men can trot along
beside us," said the Duke to the inspector.
He slipped into the car, the inspector jumped in and took the seat
beside him, and they started. They went slowly, to allow the two
policemen to keep up with them. Indeed, the car could not have made
any great pace, for the tyre of the off hind-wheel was punctured and
deflated.
Pulling a bunch of keys from his pocket, the Duke ran up the steps.
The inspector followed him. The Duke looked at the bunch, picked out
the latch-key, and fitted it into the lock. It did not open it. He
drew it out and tried another key and another. The door remained
locked.
"Let me, your Grace," said the inspector. "I'm more used to it. I
shall be quicker."
The Duke handed the keys to him, and, one after another, the
inspector fitted them into the lock. It was useless. None of them
opened the door.
"They've given me the wrong keys," said the Duke, with some
vexation. "Or no--stay--I see what's happened. The keys have been
changed."
"That isn't Lupin's way," said the inspector. "They won't have come
to much harm."
"Oh, if you say so, your Grace," said the inspector, with a brisk
relief. "Henri, go to Ragoneau, the locksmith in the Rue Theobald.
Bring him here as quickly as ever you can get him."
The policeman hurried off. The inspector bent down and searched the
steps carefully. He searched the roadway. The Duke lighted a
cigarette and watched him. The house of the millionaire stood next
but one to the corner of a street which ran at right angles to the
one in which it stood, and the corner house was empty. The inspector
searched the road, then he went round the corner. The other
policeman went along the road, searching in the opposite direction.
The Duke leant against the door and smoked on patiently. He showed
none of the weariness of a man who has spent the night in a long and
anxious drive in a rickety motor-car. His eyes were bright and
clear; he looked as fresh as if he had come from his bed after a
long night's rest. If he had not found the South Pole, he had at any
rate brought back fine powers of endurance from his expedition in
search of it.
He came up the steps and hammered again on the door. No one answered
his knock. There was a clatter of footsteps, and Henri and the
locksmith, a burly, bearded man, his bag of tools slung over his
shoulder, came hurrying up. He was not long getting to work, but it
was net an easy job. The lock was strong. At the end of five minutes
he said that he might spend an hour struggling with the lock itself;
should he cut away a piece of the door round it?
The locksmith changed his tools, and in less than three minutes he
had cut away a square piece from the door, a square in which the
lock was fixed, and taken it bodily away.
The door opened. The inspector drew his revolver, and entered the
house. The Duke followed him. The policemen drew their revolvers,
and followed the Duke. The big hall was but dimly lighted. One of
the policemen quickly threw back the shutters of the windows and let
in the light. The hall was empty, the furniture in perfect order;
there were no signs of burglary there.
"The concierge?" said the inspector, and his men hurried through the
little door on the right which opened into the concierge's rooms. In
half a minute one of them came out and said: "Gagged and bound, and
his wife too."
"But the rooms which were to be plundered are upstairs," said the
Duke--"the big drawing-rooms on the first floor. Come on; we may be
just in time. The scoundrels may not yet have got away."
The room was in disorder. Chairs were overturned, there were empty
spaces on the wall where the finest pictures of the millionaire had
been hung. The window facing the door was wide open. The shutters
were broken; one of them was hanging crookedly from only its bottom
hinge. The top of a ladder rose above the window-sill, and beside
it, astraddle the sill, was an Empire card-table, half inside the
room, half out. On the hearth-rug, before a large tapestry fire-
screen, which masked the wide fireplace, built in imitation of the
big, wide fireplaces of our ancestors, and rose to the level of the
chimney-piece-a magnificent chimney-piece in carved oak-were some
chairs tied together ready to be removed.
The Duke and the inspector ran to the window, and looked down into
the garden. It was empty. At the further end of it, on the other
side of its wall, rose the scaffolding of a house a-building. The
burglars had found every convenience to their hand-a strong ladder,
an egress through the door in the garden wall, and then through the
gap formed by the house in Process of erection, which had rendered
them independent of the narrow passage between the Walls of the
gardens, which debouched into a side-street on the right.
The Duke turned from the window, glanced at the wall opposite, then,
as if something had caught his eye, went quickly to it.
ARSENE LUPIN
"This is a job for Guerchard," said the inspector. "But I had better
get an examining magistrate to take the matter in hand first." And
he ran to the telephone.
The Duke opened the folding doors which led into the second drawing-
room. The shutters of the windows were open, and it was plain that
Arsene Lupin had plundered it also of everything that had struck his
fancy. In the gaps between the pictures on the walls was again the
signature "Arsene Lupin."
When he had gone through the two rooms he said, "The next thing to
do is to find the house-keeper. She may be sleeping still--she may
not even have heard the noise of the burglars."
"I find all this extremely interesting," said the Duke; and he
followed the inspector out of the room.
The inspector called up the two policemen, who had been freeing the
concierge and going through the rooms on the ground-floor. They did
not then examine any more of the rooms on the first floor to
discover if they also had been plundered. They went straight up to
the top of the house, the servants' quarters.
They opened the door of room after room and looked in, the inspector
taking the rooms on the right, the policemen the rooms on the left.
"Here we are," said one of the policemen." This room's been recently
occupied." They looked in, and saw that the bed was unmade. Plainly
Victoire had slept in it.
"Be?" said the inspector. "I expect she's with the burglars--an
accomplice."
"He'll have less now," said the inspector drily. "It's generally the
confidential ones who let their masters down."
The inspector and his men set about a thorough search of the house.
They found the other rooms undisturbed. In half an hour they had
established the fact that the burglars had confined their attention
to the two drawing-rooms. They found no traces of them; and they did
not find Victoire. The concierge could throw no light on her
disappearance. He and his wife had been taken by surprise in their
sleep and in the dark.
They had been gagged and bound, they declared, without so much as
having set eyes on their assailants. The Duke and the inspector came
back to the plundered drawing-room.
"Be sure you ask them to send Guerchard," said the Duke.
"M. Formery, the examining magistrate, does not get on very well
with Guerchard."
"Oh, yes--yes. He's very capable," said the inspector quickly. "But
he doesn't have very good luck."
"Very good, your Grace," said the inspector. And he rang up the
Prefecture of Police.
The Duke heard him report the crime and ask that Guerchard should be
sent. The official in charge at the moment seemed to make some
demur.
The Duke sprang to his feet, and said in an anxious tone, "Perhaps
I'd better speak to him myself,"
He took his place at the telephone and said, "I am the Duke of
Charmerace. M. Gournay-Martin begged me to secure the services of M.
Guerchard. He laid the greatest stress on my securing them, if on
reaching Paris I found that the crime had already been committed."
The official at the other end of the line hesitated. He did not
refuse on the instant as he had refused the inspector. It may be
that he reflected that M. Gournay-Martin was a millionaire and a man
of influence; that the Duke of Charmerace was a Duke; that he, at
any rate, had nothing whatever to gain by running counter to their
wishes. He said that Chief-Inspector Guerchard was not at the
Prefecture, that he was off duty; that he would send down two
detectives, who were on duty, at once, and summon Chief-Inspector
Guerchard with all speed. The Duke thanked him and rang off.
"Well, I don't expect him for another hour," said the inspector. "He
won't come till he's had his breakfast. He always makes a good
breakfast before setting out to start an inquiry, lest he shouldn't
find time to make one after he's begun it."
The Duke went upstairs to the bathroom and refreshed himself with a
cold bath. By the time he had bathed and dressed the concierge had a
meal ready for him in the dining-room. He ate it with the heartiest
appetite. Then he sent out for a barber and was shaved.
The Duke was condoling with him on this failure when they heard a
knocking at the front door, and then voices on the stairs.
CHAPTER IX
The examining magistrate came into the room. He was a plump and pink
little man, with very bright eyes. His bristly hair stood up
straight all over his head, giving it the appearance of a broad,
dapple-grey clothes-brush. He appeared to be of the opinion that
Nature had given the world the toothbrush as a model of what a
moustache should be; and his own was clipped to that pattern.
"The Duke of Charmerace, M. Formery," said the inspector.
The little man bowed and said, "Charmed, charmed to make your
acquaintance, your Grace--though the occasion--the occasion is
somewhat painful. The treasures of M. Gournay-Martin are known to
all the world. France will deplore his losses." He paused, and added
hastily, "But we shall recover them--we shall recover them."
The Duke rose, bowed, and protested his pleasure at making the
acquaintance of M. Formery.
"Is this the scene of the robbery, inspector?" said M. Formery; and
he rubbed his hands together with a very cheerful air.
"Yes, sir," said the inspector. "These two rooms seem to be the only
ones touched, though of course we can't tell till M. Gournay-Martin
arrives. Jewels may have been stolen from the bedrooms."
"I fear that M. Gournay-Martin won't be of much help for some days,"
said the Duke. "When I left him he was nearly distracted; and he
won't be any better after a night journey to Paris from Charmerace.
But probably these are the only two rooms touched, for in them M.
Gournay-Martin had gathered together the gems of his collection.
Over the doors hung some pieces of Flemish tapestry--marvels--the
composition admirable--the colouring delightful."
"It is easy to see that your Grace was very fond of them," said M.
Formery.
"I should think so," said the Duke. "I looked on them as already
belonging to me, for my father-in-law was going to give them to me
as a wedding present."
"A great loss--a great loss. But we will recover them, sooner or
later, you can rest assured of it. I hope you have touched nothing
in this room. If anything has been moved it may put me off the scent
altogether. Let me have the details, inspector."
"Does Lupin always work with accomplices?" said the Duke. "Pardon my
ignorance--but I've been out of France for so long--before he
attained to this height of notoriety."
"I wonder if Guerchard will take that view," said the Duke.
"I think, sir, that this time joke is the word, for this is a
burglary pure and simple," said the inspector.
He crossed the room to a tall safe which stood before the unused
door. The safe was covered with velvet, and velvet curtains hung
before its door. He drew the curtains, and tried the handle of the
door of the safe. It did not turn; the safe was locked.
"As far as I can see, they haven't touched this," said M. Formery.
"Thank goodness for that," said the Duke. "I believe, or at least my
fiancee does, that M. Gournay-Martin keeps the most precious thing
in his collection in that safe--the coronet."
"Well, here is a further proof that we're not dealing with Lupin.
That rascal would certainly have put his threat into execution, M.
Formery," said the inspector.
"Who's in charge of the house?" said M. Formery.
"I'll see to the concierge and his wife presently. I've sent one of
your men round for their dossier. When I get it I'll question them.
You found them gagged and bound in their bedroom?"
"The fact is, we don't know where she is," said the inspector.
"I don't think that's the case," said the Duke. "At least, my future
father-in-law and my fiancee had both of them the greatest
confidence in her. Yesterday she telephoned to us at the Chateau de
Charmerace. All the jewels were left in her charge, and the wedding
presents as they were sent in."
"And these jewels and wedding presents--have they been stolen too?"
said M. Formery.
"They don't seem to have been touched," said the Duke, "though of
course we can't tell till M. Gournay-Martin arrives. As far as I can
see, the burglars have only touched these two drawing-rooms."
"Her room is at the top of the house," said the inspector. "The bed
had been slept in, but she does not appear to have taken away any of
her clothes."
The Duke looked at the signatures on the wall. "It seems to me that
he is pretty well mixed up with it already," he said quietly.
The Duke stooped down carelessly and picked up a book which had
fallen from a table.
"Well, this book looks as if it had been knocked off the table by
one of the burglars. And look here; here's a footprint under it--a
footprint on the carpet," said the Duke.
M. Formery and the inspector came quickly to the spot. There, where
the book had fallen, plainly imprinted on the carpet, was a white
footprint. M. Formery and the inspector stared at it.
"It looks like plaster. How did plaster get here?" said M. Formery,
frowning at it.
"Well, suppose the robbers came from the garden," said the Duke.
"Of course they came from the garden, your Grace. Where else should
they come from?" said M. Formery, with a touch of impatience in his
tone.
"Well, at the end of the garden they're building a house," said the
Duke.
"I must take a careful look at that house they're building. I shall
find a good many traces there, to a dead certainty," said M.
Formery.
"I shall find footprints of exactly the same dimensions as this one
at the foot of some heap of plaster beside that house," said M.
Former; with an air of profound conviction, pointing through the
window to the house building beyond the garden.
"If you please, sir, the servants have arrived from Charmerace," he
said.
"Let them wait in the kitchen and the servants' offices," said M.
Formery. He stood silent, buried in profound meditation, for a
couple of minutes. Then he turned to the Duke and said, "What was
that you said about a theft of motor-cars at Charmerace?"
"What! We haven't? Has he escaped from the police? Oh, those country
police!" cried M. Formery.
"No; I didn't charge him with the theft," said the Duke.
"You didn't charge him with the theft?" cried M. Formery, astounded.
"No; he was very young and he begged so hard. I had the pendant. I
let him go," said the Duke.
"Yes, it does seem to have been rather weak," said the Duke; "but
there you are. It's no good crying over spilt milk."
The Duke and the inspector gazed at him with respectful eyes--at
least, the eyes of the inspector were respectful; the Duke's eyes
twinkled.
"Oh, yes, sir," said the concierge. "They hustled us a bit, but they
did not really hurt us."
"Nothing to speak of, that is," said his wife. "But all the same,
it's a disgraceful thing that an honest woman can't sleep in peace
in her bed of a night without being disturbed by rascals like that.
And if the police did their duty things like this wouldn't happen.
And I don't care who hears me say it."
"You say that you were taken by surprise in your sleep?" said M.
Formery. "You say you saw nothing, and heard nothing?"
"But the gag was the worst," said the wife. "To lie there and not be
able to tell the rascals what I thought about them!"
"One can't hear anything that happens in the garden from our
bedroom," said the concierge.
"Even the night when Mlle. Germaine's great Dane barked from twelve
o'clock till seven in the morning, all the household was kept awake
except us; but bless you, sir, we slept like tops," said his wife
proudly.
"If they sleep like that it seems rather a waste of time to have
gagged them," whispered the Duke to the inspector.
"Didn't you hear any noise at the front door?" said M. Formery.
"Then you heard no noise at all the whole night?" said M. Formery.
"Oh, yes, sir, we heard noise enough after we'd been gagged," said
the concierge.
"What room? Where did these noises come from?" said M. Formery.
"From the room over our heads--the big drawing-room," said the
concierge.
The concierge and his wife looked at one another with inquiring
eyes.
M. Formery paused. Then he said, "How long have you been in the
service of M. Gournay-Martin?"
"I'm not going to deny it, sir," said the concierge; "but it was an
honourable imprisonment."
"It was for having cried in the porch of Ste. Clotilde, 'Down with
the cows!'--meaning the police, sir," said the concierge.
"Oh, yes, sir, I have," the concierge protested. "I'm always devoted
to my masters; and I have the same opinions that they have--always."
The concierge and his wife left the room, looking as if they did not
quite know whether to feel relieved or not.
"Those two fools are telling the exact truth, unless I'm very much
mistaken," said M. Formery.
CHAPTER X
GUERCHARD ASSISTS
While they were examining the ground round the half-built house a
man came briskly down the stairs from the second floor of the house
of M. Gournay-Martin. He was an ordinary-looking man, almost
insignificant, of between forty and fifty, and of rather more than
middle height. He had an ordinary, rather shapeless mouth, an
ordinary nose, an ordinary chin, an ordinary forehead, rather low,
and ordinary ears. He was wearing an ordinary top-hat, by no means
new. His clothes were the ordinary clothes of a fairly well-to-do
citizen; and his boots had been chosen less to set off any
slenderness his feet might possess than for their comfortable
roominess. Only his eyes relieved his face from insignificance. They
were extraordinarily alert eyes, producing in those on whom they
rested the somewhat uncomfortable impression that the depths of
their souls were being penetrated. He was the famous Chief-Inspector
Guerchard, head of the Detective Department of the Prefecture of
Police, and sworn foe of Arsene Lupin.
"M. Formery and the inspector have just been up to examine the
housekeeper's room. It's right at the top of the house--on the
second floor. You take the servants' staircase. Then it's right at
the end of the passage on the left. Would you like me to take you up
to it, sir?" said the policeman eagerly. His heart was in his work.
"Thank you, I know where it is--I've just come from it," said
Guerchard gently.
"You ought not to say that, my good fellow. I can't prevent you
thinking it, of course; but you ought not to say it," said Guerchard
with husky gentleness; and the faintest smile played round the
corners of his mouth.
He walked slowly to the window, and the policeman walked with him.
"Have you noticed this, sir?" said the policeman, taking hold of the
top of the ladder with a powerful hand. "It's probable that the
burglars came in and went away by this ladder."
"They have even left this card-table on the window-sill," said the
policeman; and he patted the card-table with his other powerful
hand.
"They don't think it's Lupin's work at all," said the policeman.
"They think that Lupin's letter announcing the burglary and these
signatures on the walls are only a ruse."
"Is there any way I can help you, sir?" said policeman.
"Yes," said Guerchard. "Take up your post outside that door and
admit no one but M. Formery, the inspector, Bonavent, or Dieusy,
without consulting me." And he pointed to the drawing-room door.
Hardly had the door closed behind him when Guerchard was all
activity--activity and eyes. He examined the ladder, the gaps on the
wall from which the pictures had been taken, the signatures of
Arsene Lupin. The very next thing he did was to pick up the book
which the Duke had set on the top of the footprint again, to
preserve it; and he measured, pacing it, the distance between the
footprint and the window.
The result of this measuring did not appear to cause him any
satisfaction, for he frowned, measured the distance again, and then
stared out of the window with a perplexed air, thinking hard. It was
curious that, when he concentrated himself on a process of
reasoning, his eves seemed to lose something of their sharp
brightness and grew a little dim.
At last he seemed to come to some conclusion. He turned away from
the window, drew a small magnifying-glass from his pocket, dropped
on his hands and knees, and began to examine the surface of the
carpet with the most minute care.
The door opened, and in came M. Formery, the Duke, and the
inspector. M. Formery looked round the room with eyes which seemed
to expect to meet a familiar sight, then walked to the other
drawing-room and looked round that. He turned to the policeman, who
had stepped inside the drawing-room, and said sharply, "M. Guerchard
is not here."
"I left him here," said the policeman. "He must have disappeared.
He's a wonder."
"Of course," said M. Formery. "He has gone down the ladder to
examine that house they're building. He's just following in our
tracks and doing all over again the work we've already done. He
might have saved himself the trouble. We could have told him all he
wants to know. But there! He very likely would not be satisfied till
he had seen everything for himself."
"He may see something which we have missed," said the Duke.
"It might always prove a large mouthful," said the Duke with an
ironical smile.
"Yes; I think you have disposed of that theory, sir," said the
inspector with ready acquiescence.
"Oh, in any other matter he's open to reason," said M. Formery; "but
Lupin is his fixed idea; it's an obsession--almost a mania."
"No; and he never will. His very obsession by Lupin hampers him. It
cramps his mind and hinders its working," said M. Formery.
"Do you really think that she's the accomplice?" said the Duke.
"I'm dead sure of it," said M. Formery. "We will go up to her room
and make another thorough examination of it."
"My dear M. Formery," he said, "I beg that you will not take the
trouble."
"Myself," said Guerchard; and he came to the top of the ladder and
slipped lightly over the window-sill into the room.
The Duke shook hands with Guerchard, saying, "I'm delighted to make
your acquaintance, M. Guerchard. I've been expecting your coming
with the greatest interest. Indeed it was I who begged the officials
at the Prefecture of Police to put this case in your hands. I
insisted on it."
"There are one or two minor points on which we do not agree, but on
the whole your method has been admirable," said Guerchard.
The door opened, and in came Bonavent, one of the detectives who had
come earlier from the Prefecture. In his hand he carried a scrap of
cloth.
"I feared it," said M. Formery, taking the scrap of cloth from Mm.
"I feared foul play. We must go to the well at once, send some one
down it, or have it dragged."
"Yes, yes, that scrap of cloth," said Guerchard. And, turning to the
Duke, he added, "Do you know if there's a dog or cat in the house,
your Grace? I suppose that, as the fiance of Mademoiselle Gournay-
Martin, you are familiar with the house?"
"Yes, there is a cat," said the Duke. "I've seen a cat at the door
of the concierge's rooms."
"It must have been that cat which took this scrap of cloth to the
edge of the well," said Guerchard gravely.
"You know nothing about it!" cried M. Formery, losing his temper.
"Come, do you mean to say that you know where she is?" cried M.
Formery.
"Do you mean to tell us straight out that you've seen her?" cried M.
Formery.
"It must have been between four and five minutes ago."
"But hang it all, you haven't been out of this room!" cried M.
Formery.
"Well, why the devil don't you tell us where she is? Tell us!" cried
M. Formery, purple with exasperation.
"What do you stand there pulling all our legs for?" he almost
howled.
He walked across the room to the fireplace, pushed the chairs which
stood bound together on the hearth-rug to one side of the fireplace,
and ran the heavy fire-screen on its casters to the other side of
it, revealing to their gaze the wide, old-fashioned fireplace
itself. The iron brazier which held the coals had been moved into
the corner, and a mattress lay on the floor of the fireplace. On the
mattress lay the figure of a big, middle-aged woman, half-dressed.
There was a yellow gag in her mouth; and her hands and feet were
bound together with blue cords.
"Lend a hand, inspector," he said. "And you too, Bonavent. She looks
a good weight."
The three of them raised the mattress, and carried it and the
sleeping woman to a broad couch, and laid them on it. They staggered
under their burden, for truly Victoire was a good weight.
M. Formery rose, with recovered breath, but with his face an even
richer purple. His eyes were rolling in his head, as if they were
not under proper control.
M. Formery turned to him and said, "You must admit that it was
materially impossible for me to see her."
"It was possible if you went down on all fours," said Guerchard.
"Lupin!" cried M. Formery hotly. Then he bit his lip and was silent.
He walked to the side of the couch and looked down on the sleeping
Victoire, frowning: "This upsets everything," he said. "With these
new conditions, I've got to begin all over again, to find a new
explanation of the affair. For the moment--for the moment, I'm
thrown completely off the track. And you, Guerchard?"
"Oh, well," said Guerchard, "I have an idea or two about the matter
still."
"Do you really mean to say that it hasn't thrown you off the track
too?" said M. Formery, with a touch of incredulity in his tone.
"No, of course not--of course not. You were on the track of Lupin,"
said M. Formery; and his contemptuous smile was tinged with malice.
The Duke looked from one to the other of them with curious,
searching eyes: "I find all this so interesting," he said.
"We do not take much notice of these checks; they do not depress us
for a moment," said M. Formery, with some return of his old
grandiloquence. "We pause hardly for an instant; then we begin to
reconstruct--to reconstruct."
"It's perfectly splendid of you," said the Duke, and his limpid eyes
rested on M. Formery's self-satisfied face in a really affectionate
gaze; they might almost be said to caress it.
Guerchard looked out of the window at a man who was carrying a hod-
full of bricks up one of the ladders set against the scaffolding of
the building house. Something in this honest workman's simple task
seemed to amuse him, for he smiled.
"We shan't get anything out of this woman till she wakes," said M.
Formery, "When she does, I shall question her closely and fully. In
the meantime, she may as well be carried up to her bedroom to sleep
off the effects of the chloroform."
CHAPTER XI
In carrying out Victoire, the inspector had left the door of the
drawing-room open. After he had watched M. Formery reflect for two
minutes, Guerchard faded--to use an expressive Americanism--through
it. The Duke felt in the breast-pocket of his coat, murmured softly,
"My cigarettes," and followed him.
He caught up Guerchard on the stairs and said, "I will come with
you, if I may, M. Guerchard. I find all these investigations
extraordinarily interesting. I have been observing M. Formery's
methods--I should like to watch yours, for a change."
"By all means," said Guerchard. "And there are several things I want
to hear about from your Grace. Of course it might be an advantage to
discuss them together with M. Formery, but--" and he hesitated.
They went through the house, out of the back door, and into the
garden. Guerchard moved about twenty yards from the house, then he
stopped and questioned the Duke at great length. He questioned him
first about the Charolais, their appearance, their actions,
especially about Bernard's attempt to steal the pendant, and the
theft of the motor-cars.
"I have been wondering whether M. Charolais might not have been
Arsene Lupin himself," said the Duke.
"Oh, yes; but he must be rather fluid, this Lupin," said the Duke;
and then he added thoughtfully, "It must be awfully risky to come so
often into actual contact with men like Ganimard and you."
"Lupin has never let any consideration of danger prevent him doing
anything that caught his fancy. He has odd fancies, too. He's a
humourist of the most varied kind--grim, ironic, farcical, as the
mood takes him. He must be awfully trying to live with," said
Guerchard.
"Do you think humourists are trying to live with?" said the Duke, in
a meditative tone. "I think they brighten life a good deal; but of
course there are people who do not like them--the middle-classes."
"Yes, yes, they're all very well in their place; but to live with
they must be trying," said Guerchard quickly.
"I don't say that he WAS Charolais," said Guerchard. "It is quite a
moot point. On the whole, I'm inclined to think that he was not. The
theft of the motor-cars was a job for a subordinate. He would hardly
bother himself with it."
The Duke told him all that he could remember about the millionaire's
servants--and, under the clever questioning of the detective, he was
surprised to find how much he did remember--all kinds of odd details
about them which he had scarcely been aware of observing.
When Guerchard came to the end of his questions, the Duke said: "You
have given me a very strong feeling that it is going to be a deuce
of a job to catch Lupin. I don't wonder that, so far, you have none
of you laid hands on him."
"And then, in the affair of the Blue Diamond, Ganimard caught him
again. He has his weakness, Lupin--it's women. It's a very common
weakness in these masters of crime. Ganimard and Holmlock Shears, in
that affair, got the better of him by using his love for a woman--
'the fair-haired lady,' she was called--to nab him."
"I don't know. I have heard that she is dead," said Guerchard. "Now
I come to think of it, I heard quite definitely that she died."
"I dare say. Yet he can have his pick of sweethearts. I've been
offered thousands of francs by women--women of your Grace's world
and wealthy Viennese--to make them acquainted with Lupin," said
Guerchard.
"You don't surprise me," said the Duke with his ironic smile. "Women
never do stop to think--where one of their heroes is concerned. And
did you do it?"
"He'd never get out of YOUR clutches," said the Duke with
conviction.
"I think not--I think not," said Guerchard grimly. "But come, I may
as well get on."
He walked across the turf to the foot of the ladder and looked at
the footprints round it. He made but a cursory examination of them,
and took his way down the garden-path, out of the door in the wall
into the space about the house that was building. He was not long
examining it, and he went right through it out into the street on
which the house would face when it was finished. He looked up and
down it, and began to retrace his footsteps.
"I've seen all I want to see out here. We may as well go back to the
house," he said to the Duke.
"I hope you've seen what you expected to see," said the Duke.
They went back to the house and found M. Formery in the drawing-
room, still engaged in the process of reconstruction.
"It's Sureau Street," said Guerchard. "But Dieusy has been hunting
the neighbourhood for some one who saw the burglars loading their
conveyance, or saw it waiting to be loaded, for the last hour."
M. Formery was silent. Guerchard and the Duke sat down and lighted
cigarettes.
"What did I tell you?" he said. "I'm glad that you've changed your
mind about that."
There came a loud knocking on the front door, the sound of excited
voices on the stairs. The door opened, and in burst M. Gournay-
Martin. He took one glance round the devastated room, raised his
clenched hands towards the ceiling, and bellowed, "The scoundrels!
the dirty scoundrels!" And his voice stuck in his throat. He
tottered across the room to a couch, dropped heavily to it, gazed
round the scene of desolation, and burst into tears.
Germaine and Sonia came into the room. The Duke stepped forward to
greet them.
"I really don't know what you're talking about," said the Duke
quietly. "Wasn't there a quarter-to-nine train?"
"Of course there wasn't," said Germaine. "The time-table was years
old. I think it was the most senseless attempt at a joke I ever
heard of."
"I said it was a mistake. I was sure that his Grace would not do
anything so unkind as that," said Sonia.
"Well, all I can say is, it was very stupid of you not to look at
the date," said Germaine.
"Do not let it upset you too much. We shall find your masterpieces--
we shall find them. Only give us time," said M. Formery in a tone of
warm encouragement.
The face of the millionaire brightened a little.
"And, after all, you have the consolation, that the burglars did not
get hold of the gem of your collection. They have not stolen the
coronet of the Princesse de Lambalie," said M. Formery.
"No," said the Duke. "They have not touched this safe. It is
unopened."
"What has that got to do with it?" growled the millionaire quickly.
"That safe is empty."
"Good heavens! Then they HAVE stolen it," cried the millionaire
hoarsely, in a panic-stricken voice.
"But they can't have--this safe hasn't been touched," said the Duke.
"But the coronet never was in that safe. It was--have they entered
my bedroom?" said the millionaire.
"They don't seem to have gone through any of the rooms except these
two," said the Duke.
"Ah, then my mind is at rest about that. The safe in my bedroom has
only two keys. Here is one." He took a key from his waistcoat pocket
and held it out to them. "And the other is in this safe."
"See? See?" cried the millionaire in a sudden bellow. "I see that
they have robbed me--plundered me. Oh, my pictures! My wonderful
pictures! Such investments!"
CHAPTER XII
They stood round the millionaire observing his anguish, with eyes in
which shone various degrees of sympathy. As if no longer able to
bear the sight of such woe, Sonia slipped out of the room.
The millionaire lamented his loss and abused the thieves by turns,
but always at the top of his magnificent voice.
Suddenly a fresh idea struck him. He clapped his hand to his brow
and cried: "That eight hundred pounds! Charolais will never buy the
Mercrac now! He was not a bona fide purchaser!"
The Duke's lips parted slightly and his eyes opened a trifle wider
than their wont. He turned sharply on his heel, and almost sprang
into the other drawing-room. There he laughed at his ease.
"Are you on their track? Have you a clue?" said the millionaire.
M. Formery went over all the matters about which he had already
questioned the Duke. He questioned the millionaire and his daughter
about the Charolais, the theft of the motor-cars, and the attempted
theft of the pendant. He questioned them at less length about the
composition of their household--the servants and their characters.
He elicited no new fact.
"Yes, yes; I know all about that earlier burglary. But have you been
robbed since?" said M. Formery, interrupting him.
"Yes; I have been robbed two or three times during the last three
years," said Germaine.
"Dear me! But you ought to have told us about this before. This is
extremely interesting, and most important," said M. Formery, rubbing
his hands, "I suppose you suspect Victoire?"
"Let me see. It was in the month of August, three years ago, that
your father, after receiving a threatening letter like the one he
received last night, was the victim of a burglary?" said M. Formery.
"It was a pearl brooch--not unlike the pendant which his Grace gave
me yesterday," said Germaine.
"Would you mind showing me that pendant? I should like to see it,"
said M. Formery.
"Me? No. How should I have it?" said the Duke in some surprise.
"Haven't you got it?"
"I've only got the case--the empty case," said Germaine, with a
startled air.
"Yes," said Germaine. "It was after we came back from our useless
journey to the station. I remembered suddenly that I had started
without the pendant. I went to the bureau and picked up the case;
and it was empty."
"Yes," said the Duke. "I caught him with it in his pocket."
"Then you may depend upon it that the young rascal had slipped the
pendant out of its case and you only recovered the empty case from
him," said M. Formery triumphantly.
"No," said the Duke. "That is not so. Nor could the thief have been
the burglar who broke open the bureau to get at the keys. For long
after both of them were out of the house I took a cigarette from the
box which stood on the bureau beside the case which held the
pendant. And it occurred to me that the young rascal might have
played that very trick on me. I opened the case and the pendant was
there."
"It has been stolen!" cried the millionaire; "of course it has been
stolen."
"Oh, no, no," said the Duke. "It hasn't been stolen. Irma, or
perhaps Mademoiselle Kritchnoff, has brought it to Paris for
Germaine."
"We had better send for her and make sure," said M. Formery.
"Inspector, go and fetch her."
The inspector went out of the room and the Duke questioned Germaine
and her father about the journey, whether it had been very
uncomfortable, and if they were very tired by it. He learned that
they had been so fortunate as to find sleeping compartments on the
train, so that they had suffered as little as might be from their
night of travel.
The inspector came back with Irma. She wore the frightened, half-
defensive, half-defiant air which people of her class wear when
confronted by the authorities. Her big, cow's eyes rolled uneasily.
M. Formery cut her short, somewhat brusquely. "Excuse me, excuse me.
I am conducting this inquiry," he said. And then, turning to Irma,
he added, "Now, don't be frightened, Mademoiselle Irma; I want to
ask you a question or two. Have you brought up to Paris the pendant
which the Duke of Charmerace gave your mistress yesterday?"
"Me, sir? No, sir. I haven't brought the pendant," said Irma.
"I heard Mademoiselle Germaine say that it had been on the bureau. I
thought that perhaps Mademoiselle Kritchnoff had put it in her bag."
"Very good, thank you. You can go," said M. Formery. "I may want you
again presently."
M. Formery scribbled a few words on the paper before him and then
said: "Well, I will proceed to question Mademoiselle Kritchnoff."
"I'll go and fetch her--I know where to find her," said the Duke
quickly, moving toward the door.
The Duke turned sharply and looked at him: "I beg your pardon, but
do you--" he said.
"Yes, yes, your Grace," said M. Formery. "We have our method of
procedure. It is best to adhere to it--much the best. It is the
result of years of experience of the best way of getting the truth."
"She was going out?" said M. Formery. "You don't mean to say you're
letting members of the household go out?"
"No, sir," said the inspector. "I mean that she was just asking if
she might go out."
The door opened, and Sonia came in. She was still wearing her
travelling costume, and she carried her cloak on her arm. She stood
looking round her with an air of some surprise; perhaps there was
even a touch of fear in it. The long journey of the night before did
not seem to have dimmed at all her delicate beauty. The Duke's eyes
rested on her in an inquiring, wondering, even searching gaze. She
looked at him, and her own eyes fell.
"Stolen? Are you sure?" said Sonia in a tone of mingled surprise and
anxiety.
In order to free her hands to take the key from her wrist-bag, she
set her cloak on the back of a couch. It slipped off it, and fell to
the ground at the feet of the Duke, who had not returned to his
place beside Germaine. While she was groping in her bag for the key,
and all eyes were on her, the Duke, who had watched her with a
curious intentness ever since her entry into the room, stooped
quietly down and picked up the cloak. His hand slipped into the
pocket of it; his fingers touched a hard object wrapped in tissue-
paper. They closed round it, drew it from the pocket, and, sheltered
by the cloak, transferred it to his own. He set the cloak on the
back of the sofa, and very softly moved back to his place by
Germaine's side. No one in the room observed the movement, not even
Guerchard: he was watching Sonia too intently.
He shook his head and said: "There is no reason to search your bag--
none whatever. Have you any other luggage?"
She shrank back a little from his piercing eyes, almost as if their
gaze scared her.
She spoke in a faltering voice, and her troubled eyes could not meet
those of the detective.
"I was asking leave to go out. There is some shopping that must be
done," said Sonia.
"You do not see any reason why Mademoiselle Kritchnoff should not go
out, M. Formery, do you?" said Guerchard.
"Oh, no, none whatever; of course she can go out," said M. Formery.
Sonia turned round to go.
"One moment," said Guerchard, coming for-ward. "You've only got that
wrist-bag with you?"
"Yes," said Sonia. "I have my money and my handkerchief in it." And
she held it out to him.
Guerchard's keen eyes darted into it; and he muttered, "No point in
looking in that. I don't suppose any one would have had the
audacity--" and he stopped.
"No, thank you," said Sonia. "I'm not going to put it on."
"No . . . but it's possible . . . some one may have . . . have you
felt in the pockets of it? That one, now? It seems as if that one--"
Sonia started back with an air of utter dismay; her eyes glanced
wildly round the room as if seeking an avenue of escape; her fingers
closed convulsively on the pocket.
The Duke seemed to hold them with his own; and he said in the same
clear, piercing voice, "There isn't the slightest reason for you to
be frightened."
Sonia let go of the cloak, and Guerchard, his face all alight with
triumph, plunged his hand into the pocket. He drew it out empty, and
stared at it, while his face fell to an utter, amazed blankness.
He handed the cloak to her. Sonia took it and turned to go. She took
a step towards the door, and tottered.
The Duke sprang forward and caught her as she was falling.
"Thank you, it was nothing. I'm all right now," said Sonia,
releasing herself from the Duke's supporting arm.
She drew herself up, and walked quietly out of the room.
Guerchard took no notice of it: "I want you to give orders that
nobody leaves the house without my permission," he said, in a low
voice.
He called the inspector to him and whispered a word in his ear. Then
he rose and said: "I think, gentlemen, we ought to go and examine
the bedrooms, and, above all, make sure that the safe in M. Gournay-
Martin's bedroom has not been tampered with."
"I was wondering how much longer we were going to waste time here
talking about that stupid pendant," grumbled the millionaire; and he
rose and led the way.
Germaine and her father led the way. M. Formery, Guerchard, and the
inspector followed them. At the door the Duke paused, stopped,
closed it on them softly. He came back to the window, put his hand
in his pocket, and drew out the packet wrapped in tissue-paper.
He unfolded the paper with slow, reluctant fingers, and revealed the
pendant.
CHAPTER XIII
LUPIN WIRES
The Duke stared at the pendant, his eyes full of wonder and pity.
The door opened softly, and Sonia came quickly into the room, closed
the door, and leaned back against it. Her face was a dead white; her
skin had lost its lustre of fine porcelain, and she stared at him
with eyes dim with anguish.
Sonia groaned.
"You mustn't stop here," said the Duke in an uneasy tone, and he
looked uneasily at the door.
"For goodness' sake don't speak so loud," said the Duke, with even
greater uneasiness. "You MUST think of Guerchard."
"What do I care?" cried Sonia. "I've lost the liking of the only
creature whose liking I wanted. What does anything else matter? What
DOES it matter?"
"No, no, we must talk now!" cried Sonia. "You must know. . . .
I must tell . . . Oh, dear! . . . Oh, dear! . . . I don't know how
to tell you. . . . And then it is so unfair. . . . she . . .
Germaine . . . she has everything," she panted. "Yesterday, before
me, you gave her that pendant, . . . she smiled . . . she was proud
of it. . . . I saw her pleasure. . . . Then I took it--I took it--I
took it! And if I could, I'd take her fortune, too. . . . I hate
her! Oh, how I hate her!"
"I should never have told you that. . . . But now I dare. . . . I
dare speak out. . . . It's you! . . . It's you--" The avowal died on
her lips. A burning flush crimsoned her cheeks and faded as quickly
as it came: "I hate her!" she muttered.
"Yes, you pity me, but you despise me--you despise me beyond words.
You shall not! I will not have it!" she cried fiercely.
"Listen," said Sonia. "Have you ever been alone--alone in the world?
. . . Have you ever been hungry? Think of it . . . in this big city
where I was starving in sight of bread . . . bread in the shops . .
. .One only had to stretch out one's hand to touch it . . . a penny
loaf. Oh, it's commonplace!" she broke off: "quite commonplace!"
"There was one way I could make money and I would not do it: no, I
would not," she went on. "But that day I was dying . . . understand,
I was dying . . . .I went to the rooms of a man I knew a little. It
was my last resource. At first I was glad . . . he gave me food and
wine . . . and then, he talked to me . . . he offered me money."
"What!" cried the Duke; and a sudden flame of anger flared up in his
eyes.
"Poor child," said the Duke softly. And he stared gloomily on the
ground, overcome by this revelation of the tortures of the feeble in
the underworld beneath the Paris he knew.
The Duke raised his head and gazed at her with eyes full of an
infinite sympathy and compassion.
She gazed at him with incredulous eyes, in which joy and despair
mingled, struggling.
He came slowly towards her, and stopped short. His quick ear had
caught the sound of a footstep outside the door.
"Quick! Dry your eyes! You must look composed. The other room!" he
cried, in an imperative tone.
He caught her hand and drew her swiftly into the further drawing-
room.
"Well, M. Guerchard," he said. "I hope the burglars have not stolen
the coronet."
Guerchard turned to Sonia and said, "I was looking for you,
Mademoiselle, to tell you that M. Formery has changed his mind. It
is impossible for you to go out. No one will be allowed to go out."
"We should be very much obliged if you would go to your room," said
Guerchard. "Your meals will be sent up to you."
"What?" said Sonia, rising quickly; and she looked from Guerchard to
the Duke. The Duke gave her the faintest nod.
"Really, I'm very sorry, your Grace; but it's my trade, or, if you
prefer it, my duty. As long as things are taking place here which I
am still the only one to perceive, and which are not yet clear to
me, I must neglect no precaution."
"Of course, you know best," said the Duke. "But still, a child like
that--you're frightening her out of her life."
Guerchard shrugged his shoulders, and went quietly out of the room.
M. Formery and the inspector came hurrying down the stairs behind
him, and watched his emotion with astonished and wondering eyes.
"Yours affectionately,"
"ARSENE LUPIN."
"Humbug! You always think it's humbug! You thought the letter was
humbug; and look what has happened!" cried the millionaire.
The inspector hurried to the top of the staircase and called to the
policeman in charge of the front door. He came back to the drawing-
room and said: "It was brought by an ordinary post-office messenger,
sir."
"Where is he?" said M. Formery. "Why did you let him go?"
"If, then, he did not make the attempt last night, when he had a
clear field--when the house was empty--he certainly will not make
the attempt now when we are warned, when the police are on the spot,
and the house is surrounded. The idea is childish, gentlemen"--he
leaned against the door of the safe--"absolutely childish, but
Guerchard is mad on this point; and I foresee that his madness is
going to hamper us in the most idiotic way."
He suddenly pitched forward into the middle of the room, as the door
of the safe opened with a jerk, and Guerchard shot out of it.
"Getting in was easy enough. It's the getting out that was awkward.
These jokers had fixed up some kind of a spring so that I nearly
shot out with the door," said Guerchard, rubbing his elbow.
"But how did you get into it? How the deuce DID you get into it?"
cried M. Formery.
"Through the little cabinet into which that door behind the safe
opens. There's no longer any back to the safe; they've cut it clean
out of it--a very neat piece of work. Safes like this should always
be fixed against a wall, not stuck in front of a door. The backs of
them are always the weak point."
"And the key? The key of the safe upstairs, in my bedroom, where the
coronet is--is the key there?" cried M. Gournay-Martin.
Guerchard went back into the empty safe, and groped about in it. He
came out smiling.
Guerchard held up a card between his thumb and forefinger and said
quietly:
CHAPTER XIV
The millionaire gazed at the card with stupefied eyes, the inspector
gazed at it with extreme intelligence, the Duke gazed at it with
interest, and M. Formery gazed at it with extreme disgust.
"It's part of the same ruse--it was put there to throw us off the
scent. It proves nothing--absolutely nothing," he said scornfully.
"Oh, no, no," said M. Formery in a soothing tone. "It will be taken
into account. It will certainly be taken into account."
M. Gournay-Martin's butler appeared in the doorway of the drawing-
room: "If you please, sir, lunch is served," he said.
"No, no; I don't think there is," said M. Formery. "But still one
never knows from what quarter light may come in an affair like this.
Accident often gives us our best clues."
To him the lunch seemed very long and very tedious; but at last it
came to an end. M. Gournay-Martin seemed to have been much cheered
by the wine he had drunk. He was almost hopeful. M. Formery, who had
not by any means trifled with the champagne, was raised to the very
height of sanguine certainty. Their coffee and liqueurs were served
in the smoking-room. Guerchard lighted a cigar, refused a liqueur,
drank his coffee quickly, and slipped out of the room.
The Duke followed him, and in the hall said: "I will continue to
watch you unravel the threads of this mystery, if I may, M.
Guerchard."
They went into the drawing-room. Guerchard shut the door and turned
the key: "Now," he said, "I think that M. Formery will give me half
an hour to myself. His cigar ought to last him at least half an
hour. In that time I shall know what the burglars really did with
their plunder--at least I shall know for certain how they got it out
of the house."
"Please explain," said the Duke. "I thought we knew how they got it
out of the house." And he waved his hand towards the window.
"Oh, that," said Guerchard. "One of the burglars sat on the couch
there, rubbed plaster on the sole of his boot, and set his foot down
on the carpet. Then he dusted the rest of the plaster off his boot
and put the book on the top of the footprint."
"That narrows the problem, the quite simple problem, how was the
furniture taken out of the room. It did not go through that window
down the ladder. Again, it was not taken down the stairs, and out of
the front door, or the back. If it had been, the concierge and his
wife would have heard the noise. Besides that, it would have been
carried down into a main street, in which there are people at all
hours. Somebody would have been sure to tell a policeman that this
house was being emptied. Moreover, the police were continually
patrolling the main streets, and, quickly as a man like Lupin would
do the job, he could not do it so quickly that a policeman would not
have seen it. No; the furniture was not taken down the stairs or out
of the front door. That narrows the problem still more. In fact,
there is only one mode of egress left."
"You've hit it," said Guerchard, with a husky laugh. "By that well-
known logical process, the process of elimination, we've excluded
all methods of egress except the chimney."
"It might have been to put off an examining magistrate," said the
Duke. "Having found Victoire in the fireplace, M. Formery did not
look for anything else."
"Yes, it might have been that," said Guerchard slowly. "On the other
hand, she might have been put there to make sure that I did not miss
the road the burglars took. That's the worst of having to do with
Lupin. He knows me to the bottom of my mind. He has something up his
sleeve--some surprise for me. Even now, I'm nowhere near the bottom
of the mystery. But come along, we'll take the road the burglars
took. The inspector has put my lantern ready for me."
He went to the door of the drawing-room and bade the young policeman
fetch him a pair of steps. They were brought quickly. He took them
from the policeman, shut the door, and locked it again. He set the
steps in the fireplace and mounted them.
"Be careful," he said to the Duke, who had followed him into the
fireplace, and stood at the foot of the steps. "Some of these bricks
may drop inside, and they'll sting you up if they fall on your
toes."
The Duke stepped back out of reach of any bricks that might fall.
Guerchard set his left hand against the wall of the chimney-piece
between him and the drawing-room, and pressed hard with his right
against the top of the dappled patch of bricks. At the first push,
half a dozen of them fell with a hang on to the floor of the next
house. The light came flooding in through the hole, and shone on
Guerchard's face and its smile of satisfaction. Quickly he pushed
row after row of bricks into the next house until he had cleared an
opening four feet square.
The Duke mounted the steps, and found himself looking into a large
empty room of the exact size and shape of the drawing-room of M.
Gournay-Martin, save that it had an ordinary modern fireplace
instead of one of the antique pattern of that in which he stood. Its
chimney-piece was a few inches below the opening. He stepped out on
to the chimney-piece and dropped lightly to the floor.
"Oh, this has all been prepared a long while ago. But now I'm really
on their track. And after all, I haven't really lost any time.
Dieusy wasted no time in making inquiries in Sureau Street; he's
been working all this side of the house."
Guerchard drew up the blinds, opened the shutters, and let the
daylight flood the dim room. He came back to the fireplace and
looked down at the heap of bricks, frowning:
"I made a mistake there," he said. "I ought to have taken those
bricks down carefully, one by one."
Quickly he took brick after brick from the pile, and began to range
them neatly against the wall on the left. The Duke watched him for
two or three minutes, then began to help him. It did not take them
long, and under one of the last few bricks Guerchard found a
fragment of a gilded picture-frame.
"I tell you what," said the Duke, "I shouldn't wonder if we found
the furniture in this house still."
"Oh, no, no!" said Guerchard. "I tell you that Lupin would allow for
myself or Ganimard being put in charge of the case; and he would
know that we should find the opening in the chimney. The furniture
was taken straight out into the side-street on to which this house
opens." He led the way out of the room on to the landing and went
down the dark staircase into the hall. He opened the shutters of the
hall windows, and let in the light. Then he examined the hall. The
dust lay thick on the tiled floor. Down the middle of it was a lane
formed by many feet. The footprints were faint, but still plain in
the layer of dust. Guerchard came back to the stairs and began to
examine them. Half-way up the flight he stooped, and picked up a
little spray of flowers: "Fresh!" he said. "These have not been long
plucked."
"Salvias they are," said Guerchard. "Pink salvias; and there is only
one gardener in France who has ever succeeded in getting this shade-
-M. Gournay-Martin's gardener at Charmerace. I'm a gardener myself."
"Well, then, last night's burglars came from Charmerace. They must
have," said the Duke.
"It must be," said the Duke. "This IS interesting--if only we could
get an absolute proof."
"No, Egyptians--Mercedes."
The Duke struck a match, lighted Guerchard's cigarette, and then his
own:
"I don't know about their coming in by it," said Guerchard. "Unless
I'm very much mistaken, they came in by the front door of M.
Gournay-Martin's house."
"Of course," said the Duke. "I was forgetting. They brought the keys
from Charmerace."
"Yes, but who drew the bolts for them?" said Guerchard. "The
concierge bolted them before he went to bed. He told me so. He was
telling the truth--I know when that kind of man is telling the
truth."
"By Jove!" said the Duke softly. "You mean that they had an
accomplice?"
"I think we shall find that they had an accomplice. But your Grace
is beginning to draw inferences with uncommon quickness. I believe
that you would make a first-class detective yourself--with practice,
of course--with practice."
"Can I have missed my true career?" said the Duke, smiling. "It's
certainly a very interesting game."
So saying, he opened the front door and went out and examined the
steps carefully.
"We shall have to go back the way we came," he said, when he had
finished his examination. "The drawing-room door is locked. We ought
to find M. Formery hammering on it." And he smiled as if he found
the thought pleasing.
They went back up the stairs, through the opening, into the drawing-
room of M. Gournay-Martin's house. Sure enough, from the other side
of the locked door came the excited voice of M. Formery, crying:
"Guerchard! Guerchard! What are you doing? Let me in! Why don't you
let me in?"
"I didn't hear you," said Guerchard. "I wasn't in the room."
CHAPTER XV
"Let me show you," said Guerchard. And he led him to the fireplace,
and showed him the opening between the two houses.
M. Gournay-Martin bade him enter in a very faint voice, and the Duke
found him lying on the bed. He was looking depressed, even
exhausted, the shadow of the blusterous Gournay-Martin of the day
before. The rich rosiness of his cheeks had faded to a moderate
rose-pink.
"That telegram," moaned the millionaire. "It was the last straw. It
has overwhelmed me. The coronet is lost."
"No, no; it's still in the safe," said the millionaire. "But it's as
good as lost--before midnight it will be lost. That fiend will get
it."
"If it's in this safe now, it won't be lost before midnight," said
the Duke. "But are you sure it's there now?"
"Look for yourself," said the millionaire, taking the key of the
safe from his waistcoat pocket, and handing it to the Duke.
The Duke opened the safe. The morocco case which held the coronet
lay on the middle shell in front of him. He glanced at the
millionaire, and saw that he had closed his eyes in the exhaustion
of despair. Whistling softly, the Duke opened the case, took out the
diadem, and examined it carefully, admiring its admirable
workmanship. He put it back in the case, turned to the millionaire,
and said thoughtfully:
"I can never make up my mind, in the case of one of these old
diadems, whether one ought not to take out the stones and have them
re-cut. Look at this emerald now. It's a very fine stone, but this
old-fashioned cutting does not really do it justice."
"Oh, no, no: you should never interfere with an antique, historic
piece of jewellery. Any alteration decreases its value--its value as
an historic relic," cried the millionaire, in a shocked tone.
"I know that," said the Duke, "but the question for me is, whether
one ought not to sacrifice some of its value to increasing its
beauty."
He snapped the case briskly, put it back on the shelf, locked the
safe, and handed the key to the millionaire. Then he strolled across
the room and looked down into the street, whistling softly.
"I think--I think--I'll go home and get out of these motoring
clothes. And I should like to have on a pair of boots that were a
trifle less muddy," he said slowly.
"Good-bye for the present, then," said the Duke. And he went out of
the room and down the stairs. He took his motor-cap from the hall-
table, and had his hand on the latch of the door, when the policeman
in charge of it said, "I beg your pardon, sir, but have you M.
Guerchard's permission to leave the house?"
"M. Formery's orders?" said the Duke, standing on the top step.
"Call me a taxi-cab, please."
The concierge, who stood beside the policeman, ran down the steps
and blew his whistle. The policeman gazed uneasily at the Duke,
shifting his weight from one foot to the other; but he said no more.
A taxi-cab came up to the door, the Duke went down the steps,
stepped into it, and drove away.
Guerchard rose hastily and went to it. They heard him say: "Is
that Charmerace? . . . I want the gardener. . . . Out? When will he
be back? . . . Tell him to ring me up at M. Gournay-Martin's house
in Paris the moment he gets back. . . . Detective-Inspector
Guerchard . . . Guerchard . . . Detective-Inspector."
He turned to them with a frown, and said, "Of course, since I want
him, the confounded gardener has gone out for the day. Still, it's
of very little importance--a mere corroboration I wanted." And he
went back to his seat and lighted another cigarette.
"The doctor said that she would not really be sensible and have her
full wits about her much before ten o'clock to-night," said the
inspector; but he went to examine her present condition.
The inspector came back and reported that Victoire showed no signs
of awaking.
"Really, I cannot conceive why you should worry that poor child,"
the Duke protested, in a tone of some indignation.
"Oh, well, since you make such a point of it," said M. Formery.
"Inspector, ask Mademoiselle Kritchnoff to come here. Fetch her."
"Your Grace--"
The Duke paid no attention to him. He shut the door quickly behind
him and sprang swiftly up the stairs. He met the inspector coming
down with Sonia. Barring their way for a moment he said, in his
kindliest voice: "Now you mustn't be frightened, Mademoiselle Sonia.
All you have to do is to try to remember as clearly as you can the
circumstances of the earlier thefts at Charmerace. You mustn't let
them confuse you."
"Thank you, your Grace, I will try and be as clear as I can," said
Sonia; and she gave him an eloquent glance, full of gratitude for
the warning; and went down the stairs with firm steps.
The Duke went on up the stairs, and knocked softly at the door of M.
Gournay-Martin's bedroom. There was no answer to his knock, and he
quietly opened the door and looked in. Overcome by his misfortunes,
the millionaire had sunk into a profound sleep and was snoring
softly. The Duke stepped inside the room, left the door open a
couple of inches, drew a chair to it, and sat down watching the
staircase through the opening of the door.
He sat frowning, with a look of profound pity on his face. Once the
suspense grew too much for him. He rose and walked up and down the
room. His well-bred calm seemed to have deserted him. He muttered
curses on Guerchard, M. Formery, and the whole French criminal
system, very softly, under his breath. His face was distorted to a
mask of fury; and once he wiped the little beads of sweat from his
forehead with his handkerchief. Then he recovered himself, sat down
in the chair, and resumed his watch on the stairs.
At last, at the end of half an hour, which had seemed to him months
long, he heard voices. The drawing-room door shut, and there were
footsteps on the stairs. The inspector and Sonia came into view.
He waited till they were at the top of the stairs: then he came out
of the room, with his most careless air, and said: "Well,
Mademoiselle Sonia, I hope you did not find it so very dreadful,
after all."
She was very pale, and there were undried tears on her cheeks. "It
was horrible," she said faintly. "Horrible. M. Formery was all
right--he believed me; but that horrible detective would not believe
a word I said. He confused me. I hardly knew what I was saying."
The Duke ground his teeth softly. "Never mind, it's over now. You
had better lie down and rest. I will tell one of the servants to
bring you up a glass of wine."
He walked with her to the door of her room, and said: "Try to sleep-
-sleep away the unpleasant memory."
She went into her room, and the Duke went downstairs and told the
butler to take a glass of champagne up to her. Then he went upstairs
to the drawing-room. M. Formery was at the table writing. Guerchard
stood beside him. He handed what he had written to Guerchard, and,
with a smile of satisfaction, Guerchard folded the paper and put it
in his pocket.
"No--in fact she convinced ME that she knew nothing whatever about
it. M. Guerchard seems to entertain a different opinion. But I think
that even he is convinced that Mademoiselle Kritehnoff is not a
friend of Arsene Lupin."
"Arsene Lupin?" cried the Duke. "Surely you never thought that
Mademoiselle Kritchnoff had anything to do with Arsene Lupin?"
"I never thought so," said M. Formery. "But when one has a fixed
idea . . . well, one has a fixed idea." He shrugged his shoulders,
and looked at Guerchard with contemptuous eyes.
"There are always those thefts," said Guerchard, with a nettled air.
"I have that feeling--I have that feeling," said Guerchard quietly.
CHAPTER XVI
VICTOIRE'S SLIP
They were silent. The Duke walked to the fireplace, stepped into it,
and studied the opening. He came out again and said: "Oh, by the
way, M. Formery, the policeman at the front door wanted to stop me
going out of the house when I went home to change. I take it that M.
Guerchard's prohibition does not apply to me?"
"Of course not--of course not, your Grace," said M. Formery quickly.
"I saw that you had changed your clothes, your Grace," said
Guerchard. "I thought that you had done it here."
"No," said the Duke, "I went home. The policeman protested; but he
went no further, so I did not throw him into the middle of the
street."
"I was wondering," said the Duke, "about M. Guerchard's theory that
the burglars were let in the front door of this house by an
accomplice. Why, when they had this beautiful large opening, did
they want a front door, too?"
"I did not know that that was Guerchard's theory?" said M. Formery,
a trifle contemptuously. "Of course they had no need to use the
front door."
"Perhaps they had no need to use the front door," said Guerchard;
"but, after all, the front door was unbolted, and they did not draw
the bolts to put us off the scent. Their false scent was already
prepared"--he waved his hand towards the window--"moreover, you must
bear in mind that that opening might not have been made when they
entered the house. Suppose that, while they were on the other side
of the wall, a brick had fallen on to the hearth, and alarmed the
concierge. We don't know how skilful they are; they might not have
cared to risk it. I'm inclined to think, on the whole, that they did
come in through the front door."
M. Formery sniffed contemptuously.
"I think we shall know more about the accomplice when Victoire
awakes," said Guerchard.
At about five o'clock Guerchard grew tired of the inaction, and went
out himself to assist his subordinates, leaving M. Formery in charge
of the house itself. He promised to be back by half-past seven, to
let the examining magistrate, who had an engagement for the evening,
get away. The Duke spent his time between the drawing-room, where M.
Formery entertained him with anecdotes of his professional skill,
and the boudoir, where Germaine was entertaining envious young
friends who came to see her wedding presents. The friends of
Germaine were always a little ill at ease in the society of the
Duke, belonging as they did to that wealthy middle class which has
made France what she is. His indifference to the doings of the old
friends of his family saddened them; and they were unable to
understand his airy and persistent trifling. It seemed to them a
discord in the cosmic tune.
The afternoon wore away, and at half-past seven Guerchard had not
returned. M. Formery waited for him, fuming, for ten minutes, then
left the house in charge of the inspector, and went off to his
engagement. M. Gournay-Martin was entertaining two financiers and
their wives, two of their daughters, and two friends of the Duke,
the Baron de Vernan and the Comte de Vauvineuse, at dinner that
night. Thanks to the Duke, the party was of a liveliness to which
the gorgeous dining-room had been very little used since it had been
so fortunate as to become the property of M. Gournay-Martin.
"No, your Grace; so far, all the luck has been with the burglars.
For all that any one seems to have seen them, they might have
vanished into the bowels of the earth through the floor of the
cellars in the empty house next door. That means that they were very
quick loading whatever vehicle they used with their plunder. I
should think, myself, that they first carried everything from this
house down into the hall of the house next door; and then, of
course, they could be very quick getting them from hall to their
van, or whatever it was. But still, some one saw that van--saw it
drive up to the house, or waiting at the house, or driving away from
it."
Bonavent left the room. The Duke sat down in an easy chair, and
Guerchard stood before the fireplace.
"M. Formery told me, when you were out this afternoon, that he
believed this housekeeper to be quite innocent," said the Duke idly.
The door opened, and Bonavent brought Victoire in. She was a big,
middle-aged woman, with a pleasant, cheerful, ruddy face, black-
haired, with sparkling brown eyes, which did not seem to have been
at all dimmed by her long, drugged sleep. She looked like a well-to-
do farmer's wife, a buxom, good-natured, managing woman.
"I wish, Mr. Inspector, your man would have given me time to put on
a decent dress. I must have been sleeping in this one ever since
those rascals tied me up and put that smelly handkerchief over my
face. I never saw such a nasty-looking crew as they were in my
life."
"Dozens! The house was just swarming with them. I heard the noise; I
came downstairs; and on the landing outside the door here, one of
them jumped on me from behind and nearly choked me--to prevent me
from screaming, I suppose."
"No, I wish I had! I should know them again if I had; but they were
all masked," said Victoire.
"Let's see, you sleep in one of the top rooms, Madame Victoire. It
has a dormer window, set in the roof, hasn't it?" said Guerchard, in
the same polite, pleasant voice.
"Yes; yes. But what has that got to do with it?" said Victoire.
"On the roof? How should I hear it on the roof? There wouldn't be
any noise on the roof," said Victoire.
"Yes, and you came down to see what was making it. And you were
seized from behind on the landing, and brought in here," said
Guerchard.
"And were you tied up and gagged on the landing, or in here?" said
Guerchard.
"Oh, I was caught on the landing, and pushed in here, and then tied
up," said Victoire.
"I'm sure that wasn't one man's job," said Guerchard, looking at her
vigorous figure with admiring eyes.
"You may be sure of that," said Victoire. "It took four of them; and
at least two of them have some nice bruises on their shins to show
for it."
"I'm sure they have. And it serves them jolly well right," said
Guerchard, in a tone of warm approval. "And, I suppose, while those
four were tying you up the others stood round and looked on."
"Oh, no, they were far too busy for that," said Victoire.
"They were taking the pictures off the walls and carrying them out
of the window down the ladder," said Victoire.
"Now, tell me, did the man who took a picture from the walls carry
it down the ladder himself, or did he hand it through the window to
a man who was standing on the top of a ladder ready to receive it?"
he said.
"No, no, where were you when you came into the room?"
"I was against the door," said Victoire.
"And where was the screen?" said Guerchard. "Was it before the
fireplace?"
Victoire rose, and, Guerchard aiding her, set the screen on the
left-hand side of the fireplace.
"Now, this is very important," he said. "I must have the exact
position of the four feet of that screen. Let's see . . . some chalk
. . . of course. . . . You do some dressmaking, don't you, Madame
Victoire?"
"Oh, yes, I sometimes make a dress for one of the maids in my spare
time," said Victoire.
"Oh, yes," said Victoire, putting her hand to the pocket of her
dress.
She paused, took a step backwards, and looked wildly round the room,
while the colour slowly faded in her ruddy cheeks.
"I think you have, Madame Victoire. Feel in your pocket and see,"
said Guerchard sternly. His voice had lost its suavity; his face its
smile: his eyes had grown dangerous.
With a sudden leap Guerchard sprang upon her, caught her in a firm
grip with his right arm, and his left hand plunged into her pocket.
"But what have I done?" cried Victoire. "I'm innocent! I declare I'm
innocent. I've done nothing at all. It's not a crime to carry a
piece of chalk in one's pocket."
"Now, that's a matter for the examining magistrate. You can explain
it to him," said Guerchard. "I've got nothing to do with it: so it's
no good making a fuss now. Do go quietly, there's a good woman."
CHAPTER XVII
SONIA'S ESCAPE
"It is rather a surprise," said the Duke. "To look at her you would
think that she was the most honest woman in the world."
"Ah, you don't know Lupin, your Grace," said Guerchard. "He can do
anything with women; and they'll do anything for him. And, what's
more, as far as I can see, it doesn't make a scrap of difference
whether they're honest or not. The fair-haired lady I was telling
you about was probably an honest woman; Ganimard is sure of it. We
should have found out long ago who she was if she had been a wrong
'un. And Ganimard also swears that when he arrested Lupin on board
the Provence some woman, some ordinary, honest woman among the
passengers, carried away Lady Garland's jewels, which he had stolen
and was bringing to America, and along with them a matter of eight
hundred pounds which he had stolen from a fellow-passenger on the
voyage."
He walked across the room, picked up his cloak, and took a card-case
from the inner pocket of it. "If you don't mind, your Grace, I want
you to show this permit to my men who are keeping the door, whenever
you go out of the house. It's just a formality; but I attach
considerable importance to it, for I really ought not to make
exceptions in favour of any one. I have two men at the door, and
they have orders to let nobody out without my written permission. Of
course M. Gournay-Martin's guests are different. Bonavent has orders
to pass them out. And, if your Grace doesn't mind, it will help me.
If you carry a permit, no one else will dream of complaining of
having to do so."
"Oh, I don't mind, if it's of any help to you," said the Duke
cheerfully.
"Thank you," said Guerchard. And he wrote on his card and handed it
to the Duke.
"J. GUERCHARD."
"It's quite military," said the Duke, putting the card into his
waistcoat pocket.
There came a knock at the door, and a tall, thin, bearded man came
into the room.
"A scavenger. He thinks that it was nearly five o'clock when the van
drove off."
"Between four and five--nearly five. Then they filled up the opening
before they loaded the van. I thought they would," said Guerchard,
thoughtfully. "Anything else?"
"A few minutes after the van had gone a man in motoring dress came
out of the house," said Dieusy.
"In motoring dress?" said Guerchard quickly.
"Yes. And a little way from the house he threw away his cigarette.
The scavenger thought the whole business a little queer, and he
picked up the cigarette and kept it. Here it is."
"Oh, yes, I've had a box on most of the tables," said the Duke.
"Oh, I see what you're driving at," said the Duke. "You mean that
one of the Charolais must have taken a box."
"Then Lupin . . . since it was Lupin who managed the business last
night--since you found those salvias in the house next door . . .
then Lupin came from Charmerace."
"But it's certain, absolutely certain," said the Duke. "We have the
connecting links . . . the salvias . . . this cigarette."
"It looks very like it. You're pretty quick on a scent, I must say,"
said Guerchard. "What a detective you would have made! Only . . .
nothing is certain."
"Of course we shall; for he will come to steal the coronet between a
quarter to twelve and midnight," said Guerchard.
"Never!" said the Duke. "You don't really believe that he'll have
the cheek to attempt such a mad act?"
"Ah, you don't know this man, your Grace . . . his extraordinary
mixture of coolness and audacity. It's the danger that attracts him.
He throws himself into the fire, and he doesn't get burnt. For the
last ten years I've been saying to myself, 'Here we are: this time
I've got him! . . . At last I'm going to nab him.' But I've said
that day after day," said Guerchard; and he paused.
"Well, the days pass; and I never nab him. Oh, he is thick, I tell
you. . . . He's a joker, he is . . . a regular artist"--he ground
his teeth--"The damned thief!"
The Duke looked at him, and said slowly, "Then you think that to-
night Lupin--"
"Yes, he followed him for about a hundred yards. He went down into
Sureau Street, and turned westwards. Then a motor-car came along; he
got into it, and went off."
"Well, off you go," said Guerchard. "Now that you've got started,
you'll probably get something else before very long."
Dieusy saluted and went.
"You seem to have all the possible information you can want at your
finger-ends," said the Duke, in an admiring tone.
They were silent for a while. Then Germaine's maid, Irma, came into
the room and said:
"Oh, very well, I'll go up to her," said the Duke. "I can speak to
her in the library."
He rose and was going towards the door when Guerchard stepped
forward, barring his way, and said, "No, your Grace."
"I beg you will wait a minute or two till I've had a word with you,"
said Guerchard; and he drew a folded sheet of paper from his pocket
and held it up.
"Yes, your Grace, in the drawing-room," said Irma; and she turned to
go.
"Yes; and say that I shall be engaged for the next five minutes--the
next five minutes, do you understand?" said the Duke.
"Yes, your Grace," said Irma; and she went out of the door.
"I got this from M. Formery," said Guerchard, holding up the paper.
"Oh, come, it's impossible," said the Duke. "You're never going to
arrest that child?"
"I am, indeed," said Guerchard. "Her examination this afternoon was
in the highest degree unsatisfactory. Her answers were embarrassed,
contradictory, and in every way suspicious."
"And you've made up your mind to arrest her?" said the Duke slowly,
knitting his brow in anxious thought.
"I have, indeed," said Guerchard. "And I'm going to do it now. The
prison van ought to be waiting at the door." He looked at his watch.
"She and Victoire can go together."
"Well, you understand the position, don't you, your Grace?" said
Guerchard, in a tone of apology. "Believe me that, personally, I've
no animosity against Mademoiselle Kritchnoff. In fact, the child
attracts me."
"Yes," said the Duke softly, in a musing tone. "She has the air of a
child who has lost its way . . . lost its way in life. . . . And
that poor little hiding-place she found . . . that rolled-up
handkerchief . . . thrown down in the corner of the little room in
the house next door . . . it was absolutely absurd."
"Yes: I supposed you knew all about it. Of course M. Formery left
word for you," said the Duke, with an air of surprise at the
ignorance of the detective.
"M. Formery took the pearls, but he left the handkerchief. I suppose
it's in the corner where he found it," said the Duke.
"He left the handkerchief?" cried Guerchard. "If that isn't just
like the fool! He ought to keep hens; it's all he's fit for!"
He ran to the fireplace, seized the lantern, and began lighting it:
"Where is the handkerchief?" he cried.
"In the left-hand corner of the little room on the right on the
second floor. But if you're going to arrest Mademoiselle Kritchnoff,
why are you bothering about the handkerchief? It can't be of any
importance," said the Duke.
"No, you've just given me the proof; and since she was able to hide
the pearls in the house next door, she knew the road which led to
it. Therefore she's an accomplice," said Guerchard, in a triumphant
tone.
"What? Do you think that, too?" cried the Duke. "Good Heavens! And
it's me! . . . It's my senselessness! . . . It's my fault that
you've got your proof!" He spoke in a tone of acute distress.
"It was your duty to give it me," said Guerchard sternly; and he
began to mount the steps.
"Shall I come with you? I know where the handkerchief is," said the
Duke quickly.
"No, thank you, your Grace," said Guerchard. "I prefer to go alone."
The Duke put his head inside the drawing-room door, and said to the
empty room: "Here is Mademoiselle Kritchnoff, M. Guerchard." He held
open the door, Sonia came down the stairs, and went through it. The
Duke followed her into the drawing-room, and shut the door.
"No, you're not. You must go--at once," said the Duke.
"But how can I go? No one can get out of the house. M. Guerchard
won't let them," cried Sonia, panic-stricken.
Sonia stood by his side, panting quickly with fear, and watched him
do it. He had scarcely finished the last stroke, when they heard a
noise on the other side of the opening into the empty house. The
Duke looked at the fireplace, and his teeth bared in an expression
of cold ferocity. He rose with clenched fists, and took a step
towards the fireplace.
"I can't see any handkerchief," said Guerchard. "Didn't you say it
was in the left-hand corner of the little room on the right?"
"I told you you'd better let me come with you, and find it," said
the Duke, in a tone of triumph. "It's in the right-hand corner of
the little room on the left."
"I could have sworn you said the little room on the right," said
Guerchard.
"Now, you must get out of the house quickly." said the Duke. "Show
this card to the detectives at the door, and they'll pass you
without a word."
"But this is madness," said Sonia. "When Guerchard finds out about
this card--that you--you--"
"A little hotel near the Star. I've forgotten the name of it," said
Sonia. "But this card--"
"I shan't. But go--go," said the Duke, and he slipped his right arm
round her and drew her to the door.
The Duke's other arm went round her; he drew her to him, and their
lips met.
He loosed her, and opened the door, saying loudly: "You're sure you
won't have a cab, Mademoiselle Kritchnoff?"
"No; no, thank you, your Grace. Goodnight," said Sonia. And she went
through the door with a transfigured face.
CHAPTER XVIII
"No. Are you sure you saw the handkerchief in one of those little
rooms on the second floor--quite sure?" said Guerchard.
"You can't have looked properly," said the Duke, with a touch of
irony in his voice. "If I were you, I should go back and look
again."
"No. If I've looked for a thing, I've looked for it. There's no need
for me to look a second time. But, all the same, it's rather funny.
Doesn't it strike you as being rather funny, your Grace?" said
Guerchard, with a worried air.
"No, I'm not mad," said Bonavent. "Gone! But who let her go?" cried
Guerchard.
Bonavent went to the top of the staircase, and called down it.
Guerchard followed him. Two detectives came hurrying up the stairs
and into the drawing-room.
"But she had your permit, sir, and it WAS written on your card,"
stammered one of the detectives.
He stood thoughtful for a moment. Then quietly he told his two men
to go back to their post. He did not stir for a minute or two,
puzzling it out, seeking light.
Then he came back slowly into the drawing-room and looked uneasily
at the Duke. The Duke was sitting in his easy chair, smoking a
cigarette with a listless air. Guerchard looked at him, and looked
at him, almost as if he now saw him for the first time.
"Well?" said the Duke, "have you sent that poor child off to prison?
If I'd done a thing like that I don't think I should sleep very
well, M. Guerchard."
"By Jove, I AM glad to hear that!" cried the Duke. "You'll forgive
my lack of sympathy, M. Guerchard; but she was such a child."
"You really think she is?" said the Duke, in a tone of doubt.
The Duke shook his head, and looked as solemn as an owl. Guerchard
looked at him uneasily, went out of the drawing-room, and shut the
door.
"Not much more than five minutes," said Bonavent. "She came out from
talking to you in the drawing-room--"
"Yes," said Bonavent. "She came out and went straight down the
stairs and out of the house."
A faint, sighing gasp came from Guerchard's lips. He dashed into the
drawing-room, crossed the room quickly to his cloak, picked it up,
took the card-case out of the pocket, and counted the cards in it.
Then he looked at the Duke.
"The van had been waiting at the door since half-past nine."
"Then I suppose I'd better send the other prison-van away?" said
Bonavent.
"What! What on earth are you talking about?" cried Guerchard, with a
sudden anxiety in his voice and on his face.
Guerchard jumped; and his face went purple with fury and dismay.
"You don't mean to tell me that two prison-vans have been here?" he
cried.
"No," said Bonavent; "they must have been new men. They told me they
came from the Sante."
"You silly fool!" said Guerchard through his teeth. "A fine lot of
sense you've got."
"He certainly shows foresight," said the Duke. "It was very clever
of him to foresee the arrest of Victoire and provide against it."
He turned on Bonavent, and went on: "It's no use your standing there
with your mouth open, looking like a fool. Go upstairs to the
servants' quarters and search Victoire's room again. That fool of an
inspector may have missed something, just as he missed Victoire
herself. Get on! Be smart!"
Bonavent went off briskly. Guerchard paced up and down the room,
scowling.
"I don't know about that," said the Duke thoughtfully. "I think it
would have required an uncommon fool to discover that trick."
"It can't be a very comfortable business, then," said the Duke. "But
I suppose it has its charms."
The telephone bell rang; and he rose and went to it. He put the
receiver to his ear and said, "Yes; it's I--Chief-Inspector
Guerchard."
He turned to the Duke and said, "Did you hear that, your Grace? The
gardener says that you were the only person in his hot-houses
yesterday, the only person who could have plucked any pink salvias."
Guerchard took the photograph from the prayer-book and looked at it:
"It looks about ten years old," he said. "It's a good deal faded for
reproduction. Hullo! What have we here?"
The photograph showed Victoire in her Sunday best, and with her a
boy of seventeen or eighteen. Guerchard's eyes glued themselves to
the face of the boy. He stared at it, holding the portrait now
nearer, now further off. His eyes kept stealing covertly from the
photograph to the face of the Duke.
The Duke caught one of those covert glances, and a vague uneasiness
flickered in his eyes. Guerchard saw it. He came nearer to the Duke
and looked at him earnestly, as if he couldn't believe his eyes.
"What's the matter?" said the Duke. "What are you looking at so
curiously? Isn't my tie straight?" And he put up his hand and felt
it.
"Those people are going," said the Duke. "I must go down and say
good-bye to them." And he rose and went out of the room.
The Duke ran down the stairs, and said goodbye to the millionaire's
guests. After they had gone, M. Gournay-Martin went quickly up the
stairs; Germaine and the Duke followed more slowly.
"My father is going to the Ritz to sleep," said Germaine, "and I'm
going with him. He doesn't like the idea of my sleeping in this
house to-night. I suppose he's afraid that Lupin will make an attack
in force with all his gang. Still, if he did, I think that Guerchard
could give a good account of himself--he's got men enough in the
house, at any rate. Irma tells me it's swarming with them. It would
never do for me to be in the house if there were a fight."
"Oh, come, you don't really believe that Lupin is coming to-night?"
said the Duke, with a sceptical laugh. "The whole thing is sheer
bluff--he has no more intention of coming tonight to steal that
coronet than--than I have."
She ran up the stairs, and the Duke went into the drawing-room. He
found Guerchard standing where he had left him, still frowning,
still thinking hard.
"The family are off to the Ritz. It's rather a reflection on your
powers of protecting them, isn't it?" said the Duke.
"Oh, no, no; it's quite straight, your Grace," said Guerchard, but
he did not take his eyes from the Duke's face.
"There's no reason to go," said the Duke. "Why ARE you going?"
"Oh. you can have a dozen policemen in the room if you like," said
the Duke. "Can't he, M. Guerchard?"
"Certainly," said Guerchard. "I can answer for it that you will be
in no danger, M. Gournay-Martin."
"Thank you," said the millionaire. "But all the same, outside is
good enough for me."
"For once in a way you are ready first, papa," she said. "Are you
coming, Jacques?"
"No; I think I'll stay here, on the chance that Lupin is not
bluffing," said the Duke. "I don't think, myself, that I'm going to
be gladdened by the sight of him--in fact, I'm ready to bet against
it. But you're all so certain about it that I really must stay on
the chance. And, after all, there's no doubt that he's a man of
immense audacity and ready to take any risk."
"Well, at any rate, if he does come he won't find the diadem," said
M. Gournay-Martin, in a tone of triumph. "I'm taking it with me--
I've got it here." And he held up his bag.
"If Lupin's really made up his mind to collar that coronet, and if
you're so sure that, in spite of all these safeguards, he's going to
make the attempt, it seems to me that you're taking a considerable
risk. He asked you to have it ready for him in your bedroom. He
didn't say which bedroom."
"Good Heavens!" said the millionaire, pulling out his keys and
unlocking the bag. He opened it, paused hesitatingly, and snapped it
to again.
He led the way out of the drawing-room door and the Duke followed
him. He shut the door and said in a whisper:
"Oh, I think so," said the Duke. "Besides, I shall be here to look
after Guerchard. And, though I wouldn't undertake to answer for
Lupin, I think I can answer for Guerchard. If he tries to escape
with the coronet, I will wring his neck for you with pleasure. It
would do me good. And it would do Guerchard good, too."
hardly had the door closed behind the millionaire and the Duke, when
Guerchard crossed the room quickly to Germaine and drew from his
pocket the photograph of Victoire and the young man.
"I seem to know the face of the woman," said Germaine. "But if it's
ten years old it certainly isn't the photograph of the Duke."
"Oh, yes, it's like the Duke as he is now--at least, it's a little
like him. But it's not like the Duke as he was ten years ago. He has
changed so," said Germaine.
The door opened and the millionaire and the Duke came into the room.
M. Gournay-Martin set his bag upon the table, unlocked it, and with
a solemn air took out the case which held the coronet. He opened it;
and they looked at it.
"I think, after all, I'll change my mind and go with you. I'm very
short of sleep," said the Duke. "Good-night, M. Guerchard."
"Are you afraid?" said Guerchard, and there was challenge, almost an
insolent challenge, in his tone.
There was a pause. The Duke frowned slightly with a reflective air.
Then he drew himself up; and said a little haughtily:
"Do you really mean to say you're not going home to bed, Jacques?"
said Germaine, disregarding her father's wish with her usual
frankness.
"No; I'm going to stay with M. Guerchard," said the Duke slowly.
"Oh, that will be all right," said the Duke carelessly. "This
interesting affair is to be over by midnight, isn't it?"
"Well, I warn you that, tired or fresh, you will have to come with
me to the Princess's to-morrow night. All Paris will be there--all
Paris, that is, who are in Paris."
They went out of the drawing-room and down the stairs, all four of
them. There was an alert readiness about Guerchard, as if he were
ready to spring. He kept within a foot of the Duke right to the
front door. The detective in charge opened it; and they went down
the steps to the taxi-cab which was awaiting them. The Duke kissed
Germaine's fingers and handed her into the taxi-cab.
The Duke turned and came up the steps, followed by Guerchard. In the
hall he took his opera-hat and coat from the stand, and went
upstairs. Half-way up the flight he paused and said:
"Very good," said the Duke; and he went into the drawing-room.
He sat down, lighted a cigarette, and yawned. Then he took out his
watch and looked at it.
When Guerchard joined the Duke in the drawing-room, he had lost his
calm air and was looking more than a little nervous. He moved about
the room uneasily, fingering the bric-a-brac, glancing at the Duke
and looking quickly away from him again. Then he came to a
standstill on the hearth-rug with his back to the fireplace.
"Do you think it's quite safe to stand there, at least with your
back to the hearth? If Lupin dropped through that opening suddenly,
he'd catch you from behind before you could wink twice," said the
Duke, in a tone of remonstrance.
"Yes; and of course you're hardly fit for it," said Guerchard. "If
I'd known about your break-down in your car last night, I should
have hesitated about asking you--"
"Yes, you left Charmerace at eight o'clock last night. And you only
reached Paris at six this morning. You couldn't have had a very
high-power car?" said Guerchard.
"Yes, it was pretty bad, but I've known worse," said the Duke
carelessly. "It lost me about three hours: oh, at least three hours.
I'm not a first-class repairer, though I know as much about an
engine as most motorists."
"And there was nobody there to help you repair it?" said Guerchard.
The Duke dropped the end of his cigarette into a tray, and took out
his case. He held it out towards Guerchard, and said, "A cigarette?
or perhaps you prefer your caporal?"
"Yes, I do, but all the same I'll have one," said Guerchard, coming
quickly across the room. And he took a cigarette from the case, and
looked at it.
"All the same, all this is very curious," he said in a new tone, a
challenging, menacing, accusing tone.
The Duke rose from his chair quickly and said haughtily, in icy
tones: "M. Guerchard. you've been drinking!"
He went to the chair on which he had set his overcoat and his hat,
and picked them up. Guerchard sprang in front of him, barring his
way, and cried in a shaky voice: "No; don't go! You mustn't go!"
"What do you mean?" said the Duke, and paused. "What DO you mean?"
Guerchard stepped back, and ran his hand over his forehead. He was
very pale, and his forehead was clammy to his touch:
"Very good," said the Duke. "But what is it we're going to do?"
Guerchard opened the case, and the coronet sparkled and gleamed
brightly in the electric light: "Yes, it is there; you see it?" said
Guerchard.
"Yes, I see it; well?" said the Duke, looking at him in some
bewilderment, so unlike himself did he seem.
"Not a bit of it," said the Duke, with cheerful derision. "To make
the acquaintance of this scoundrel who has fooled you for ten years
is as charming a way of spending the evening as I can think of."
"You've got keener ears than I," said Guerchard grudgingly. "In all
this business you've shown the qualities of a very promising
detective." He rose, went to the door, and unlocked it.
Bonavent came in: "I've brought you the handcuffs, sir," he said,
holding them out. "Shall I stay with you?"
"No," said Guerchard. "You've two men at the back door, and two at
the front, and a man in every room on the ground-floor?"
"Yes, and I've got three men on every other floor," said Bonavent,
in a tone of satisfaction.
Guerchard watched the Duke's face with intent eyes. Not a shadow
flickered its careless serenity.
"If any one tries to enter the house, collar him. If need be, fire
on him," said Guerchard firmly. "That is my order; go and tell the
others."
"Very good, sir," said Bonavent; and he went out of the room.
"It's even more of a fortress than you think, your Grace. I've four
men on that landing," said Guerchard, nodding towards the door.
"Oh, have you?" said the Duke, with a sudden air of annoyance.
"I should jolly well think not," said the Duke. "With these
precautions, Lupin will never be able to get into this room at all."
They both laughed. The Duke rose, yawned, picked up his coat and
hat, and said, "Ah, well, I'm off to bed."
"Well," said the Duke, yawning again, "I was staying to see Lupin.
As there's no longer any chance of seeing him--"
"Do you still cling to that notion?" said the Duke wearily.
Guerchard lowered his voice and said with an air of the deepest
secrecy: "He's already here, your Grace."
"Well, but, well, but--if he's here we've got him. . . . He is going
to turn up," said the Duke triumphantly; and he set down his hat on
the table beside the coronet.
"Well, you have said yourself that this is a fortress. An hour ago,
perhaps, Lupin was resolved to enter this room, but is he now?"
"I see what you mean," said the Duke, in a tone of disappointment.
"Yes; you see that now it needs the devil's own courage. He must
risk everything to gain everything, and throw off the mask. Is Lupin
going to throw himself into the wolf's jaws? I dare not think it.
What do you think about it?"
The anxiety in the detective's face grew plainer, it almost gave him
the air of being unnerved; and he said quickly, in a jerky voice:
"Yes, and I know his way of acting too. During the last ten years I
have learnt to unravel his intrigues--to understand and anticipate
his manoeuvres. . . . Oh, his is a clever system! . . . Instead of
lying low, as you'd expect, he attacks his opponent . . . openly. .
. . He confuses him--at least, he tries to." He smiled a half-
confident, a half-doubtful smile, "It is a mass of entangled,
mysterious combinations. I've been caught in them myself again and
again. You smile?"
"Oh, it interests me," said Guerchard, with a snarl. "But this time
I see my way clearly. No more tricks--no more secret paths . . .
We're fighting in the light of day." He paused, and said in a clear,
sneering voice, "Lupin has pluck, perhaps, but it's only thief's
pluck."
"Oh, is it?" said the Duke sharply, and there was a sudden faint
glitter in his eyes.
"One can't have everything," said the Duke quietly; but his languid
air had fallen from him.
"You go a trifle too far, I think," said the Duke, smiling with
equal contempt.
They looked one another in the eyes with a long, lingering look.
They had suddenly the air of fencers who have lost their tempers,
and are twisting the buttons off their foils.
"Not a bit of it, your Grace," said Guerchard; and his voice
lingered on the words "your Grace" with a contemptuous stress. "This
famous Lupin is immensely overrated."
"However, he has done some things which aren't half bad," said the
Duke, with his old charming smile.
He had the air of a duelist drawing his blade lovingly through his
fingers before he falls to.
"No," snarled Guerchard. "But he has done better than that lately. .
. . Why don't you speak of that?"
"What! Did he do that?" cried the Duke; and then he added slowly,
"But, you know, I'm like you--I'm so easy to imitate."
"What would have been amusing, your Grace, would have been to get as
far as actual marriage," said Guerchard more calmly.
"Oh, if he had wanted to," said the Duke; and he threw out his
hands. "But you know--married life--for Lupin."
"He must be in love with some one else," said the Duke.
"Perhaps that's what one should call a marriage of reason," said the
Duke, with a faint smile.
The Duke rose quietly, and said coldly, "Have you finished?"
"Don't laugh. You know nothing--nothing, dear boy," said the Duke
tauntingly.
"What do I risk?" said the Duke, with scathing contempt. "Can you
arrest me? . . . You can arrest Lupin . . . but arrest the Duke of
Charmerace, an honourable gentleman, member of the Jockey Club, and
of the Union, residing at his house, 34 B, University Street . . .
arrest the Duke of Charmerace, the fiance of Mademoiselle Gournay-
Martin?"
"Well, do it," taunted the Duke. "Be an ass. . . . Make yourself the
laughing-stock of Paris . . . call your coppers in. Have you a
proof--one single proof? Not one."
"I think you may," said the Duke coolly. "And you might be able to
arrest me next week . . . the day after to-morrow perhaps . . .
perhaps never . . . but not to-night, that's certain."
"Now, don't excite yourself," said the Duke. "That won't produce any
proofs for you. . . . The fact is, M. Formery told you the truth
when he said that, when it is a case of Lupin, you lose your head.
Ah, that Formery--there is an intelligent man if you like."
"Wait, my good chap . . . wait," said the Duke slowly; and then he
snapped out: "Do you know what's behind that door?" and he flung out
his hand towards the door of the inner drawing-room, with a
mysterious, sinister air.
"What?" cried Guerchard; and he whipped round and faced the door,
with his eyes starting out of his head.
"Get out, you funk!" said the Duke, with a great laugh.
"Oh, you're as brave as the next man. But who can stand the anguish
of the unknown thing which is bound to happen? . . . I'm right. You
feel it, you're sure of it. At the end of these few fixed minutes an
inevitable, fated event must happen. Don't shrug your shoulders,
man; you're green with fear."
The Duke was no longer a smiling, cynical dandy. There emanated from
him an impression of vivid, terrible force. His voice had deepened.
It thrilled with a consciousness of irresistible power; it was
overwhelming, paralyzing. His eyes were terrible.
"I thought you were sure of it," said the Duke in a jeering tone.
Guerchard dragged the handcuffs out of his pocket, and said between
his teeth, "I don't know what prevents me, my boy."
The Duke drew himself up, and said haughtily, "That's enough."
"I say that that's enough," said the Duke sternly. "It's all very
well for me to play at being familiar with you, but don't you call
me 'my boy.'"
"In three minutes from now the coronet will have been stolen; and
you will not arrest me," said the Duke, in a tone of chilling
certainty.
"Don't swear any foolish oaths! . . . THERE ARE ONLY TWO MINUTES
LEFT," said the Duke; and he drew a revolver from his pocket.
"What's the matter?" said the Duke, with an air of surprise. "You
haven't forbidden me to shoot Lupin. I have my revolver ready, since
he's going to come. . . . THERE'S ONLY A MINUTE LEFT."
"There are plenty of us," said Guerchard; and he went towards the
door.
"I call myself the Duke of Charmerace. You will be arrested to-
morrow!" said the Duke, in a compelling, thrilling voice.
"Yes, yes," muttered Guerchard huskily. And his eyes shot from the
coronet to the Duke, from the Duke to the coronet.
"In fifty seconds the coronet will be stolen," said the Duke.
Then the first stroke rang out; and the eyes of the two men met like
crossing blades. Twice the Duke made the slightest movement. Twice
Guerchard started forward to meet it.
At the last stroke both their hands shot out. Guerchard's fell
heavily on the case which held the coronet. The Duke's fell on the
brim of his hat; and he picked it up.
"I HAVE it; now then, have I won? Have I been fooled this time? Has
Lupin got the coronet?"
"It doesn't look like it. But are you quite sure?" said the Duke
gaily.
"It's only the weight of it," said the Duke, repressing a laugh.
"Doesn't it strike you that it's just a trifle light?"
The door flew open, and half a dozen detectives rushed in.
"Gentlemen," said the Duke sadly, "the coronet has been stolen."
The cold light of the early September morning illumined but dimly
the charming smoking-room of the Duke of Charmerace in his house at
34 B, University Street, though it stole in through two large
windows. The smoking-room was on the first floor; and the Duke's
bedroom opened into it. It was furnished in the most luxurious
fashion, but with a taste which nowadays infrequently accompanies
luxury. The chairs were of the most comfortable, but their lines
were excellent; the couch against the wall, between the two windows,
was the last word in the matter of comfort. The colour scheme, of a
light greyish-blue, was almost too bright for a man's room; it would
have better suited a boudoir. It suggested that the owner of the
room enjoyed an uncommon lightness and cheerfulness of temperament.
On the walls, with wide gaps between them so that they did not
clash, hung three or four excellent pictures. Two ballet-girls by
Degas, a group of shepherdesses and shepherds, in pink and blue and
white beribboned silk, by Fragonard, a portrait of a woman by
Bastien-Lepage, a charming Corot, and two Conder fans showed that
the taste of their fortunate owner was at any rate eclectic. At the
end of the room was, of all curious things, the opening into the
well of a lift. The doors of it were open, though the lift itself
was on some other floor. To the left of the opening stood a book-
case, its shelves loaded with books of a kind rather suited to a
cultivated, thoughtful man than to an idle dandy.
Beside the window, half-hidden, and peering through the side of the
curtain into the street, stood M. Charolais. But it was hardly the
M. Charolais who had paid M. Gournay-Martin that visit at the
Chateau de Charmerace, and departed so firmly in the millionaire's
favourite motor-car. This was a paler M. Charolais; he lacked
altogether the rich, ruddy complexion of the millionaire's visitor.
His nose, too, was thinner, and showed none of the ripe acquaintance
with the vintages of the world which had been so plainly displayed
on it during its owner's visit to the country. Again, hair and
eyebrows were no longer black, but fair; and his hair was no longer
curly and luxuriant, but thin and lank. His moustache had vanished,
and along with it the dress of a well-to-do provincial man of
business. He wore a livery of the Charmeraces, and at that early
morning hour had not yet assumed the blue waistcoat which is an
integral part of it. Indeed it would have required an acute and
experienced observer to recognize in him the bogus purchaser of the
Mercrac. Only his eyes, his close-set eyes, were unchanged.
Walking restlessly up and down the middle of the room, keeping out
of sight of the windows, was Victoire. She wore a very anxious air,
as did Charolais too. By the door stood Bernard Charolais; and his
natural, boyish timidity, to judge from his frightened eyes, had
assumed an acute phase.
"By the Lord, we're done!" cried Charolais, starting back from the
window. "That was the front-door bell."
"I've sent down the lift to the bottom, in case he should come back
by the secret entrance," said Victoire; and she went to the opening
into the well of the lift and stood looking down it, listening with
all her ears.
"Then why, in the devil's name, have you left the doors open?" cried
Charolais irritably. "How do you expect the lift to come up if the
doors are open?"
She stepped to the side of the lift and pressed a button. The doors
closed, and there was a grunting click of heavy machinery settling
into a new position.
"But, hang it all! Suppose the police come! Suppose they ransack his
papers. . . . He hasn't told us what to do . . . we are not ready
for them. . . . What are we to do?" cried Charolais, in a tone of
despair.
"Well, I'm worse off than you are; and I'm not making a fuss. If the
police come they'll arrest me," said Victoire.
She started again her pacing up and down the room, twisting her
hands, and now and again moistening her dry lips with the tip of her
tongue.
Presently she said: "Are those two plain-clothes men still there
watching?" And in her anxiety she came a step nearer the window.
"Keep away from the window!" snapped Charolais. "Do you want to be
recognized, you great idiot?" Then he added, more quietly, "They're
still there all right, curse them, in front of the cafe. . . .
Hullo!"
"Are they coming this way?" said Victoire; and she ran to the door
and caught hold of the handle.
"This way? . . . Are they coming this way?" cried Victoire faintly;
and she pressed her hand to her side.
"They are!" cried Charolais. "They are!" And he dropped the curtain
with an oath.
The bell had hardly stopped ringing, when there was a slow, whirring
noise. The doors of the lift flew open, and the Duke stepped out of
it. But what a changed figure from the admirably dressed dandy who
had walked through the startled detectives and out of the house of
M. Gournay-Martin at midnight! He was pale, exhausted, almost
fainting. His eyes were dim in a livid face; his lips were grey. He
was panting heavily. He was splashed with mud from head to foot: one
sleeve of his coat was torn along half its length. The sole of his
left-hand pump was half off; and his cut foot showed white and red
through the torn sock.
He staggered past them into his bedroom, and slammed the door.
Victoire and Charolais hurried out of the room, through the
anteroom, on to the landing. Victoire ran upstairs, Charolais went
slowly down. Bernard pressed the button. The doors of the lift shut
and there was a slow whirring as it went down. He pressed another
button, and the book-case slid slowly across and hid the opening
into the lift-well. Bernard ran out of the room and up the stairs.
Charolais went to the front door and fumbled with the bolts. He
bawled through the door to the visitors not to be in such a hurry at
that hour in the morning; and they bawled furiously at him to be
quick, and knocked and rang again and again. He was fully three
minutes fumbling with the bolts, which were already drawn. At last
he opened the door an inch or two, and looked out.
On the instant the door was dashed open, flinging him back against
the wall; and Bonavent and Dieusy rushed past him, up the stairs, as
hard as they could pelt. A brown-faced, nervous, active policeman
followed them in and stopped to guard the door.
"Which way did he go?" said Bonavent. "We were on his very heels."
"I don't know; but we've jolly well stopped his getting into his own
house; and that's the main thing," said Dieusy triumphantly.
"But are you sure it was him?" said Bonavent, stepping into the
anteroom.
"I can swear to it," said Dieusy confidently; and he followed him.
Charolais came rushing up the stairs and caught them up as they were
entering the smoking-room:
"Here! What's all this?" he cried. "You mustn't come in here! His
Grace isn't awake yet."
"Awake? Awake? Your precious Duke has been galloping all night,"
cried Dieusy. "And he runs devilish well, too."
The door of the bedroom opened; and Lupin stood on the threshold in
slippers and pyjamas.
The eyes and mouths of Bonavent and Dieusy opened wide; and they
stared at him blankly, in utter bewilderment and wonder.
"Is it you who are making all this noise?" said Lupin, frowning at
them. "Why, I know you two; you're in the service of M. Guerchard."
"Well, what are you doing here? What is it you want?" said Lupin.
"Oh, nothing, your Grace . . . nothing . . . there's been a
mistake," stammered Bonavent.
"A mistake?" said Lupin haughtily. "I should think there had been a
mistake. But I take it that this is Guerchard's doing. I'd better
deal with him directly. You two can go." He turned to Charolais and
added curtly, "Show them out."
Charolais opened the door, and the two detectives went out of the
room with the slinking air of whipped dogs. They went down the
stairs in silence, slowly, reflectively; and Charolais let them out
of the front door.
As they went down the steps Dieusy said: "What a howler! Guerchard
risks getting the sack for this!"
When the door closed behind the two detectives Lupin tottered across
the room, dropped on to the couch with a groan of exhaustion, and
closed his eyes. Presently the door opened, Victoire came in, saw
his attitude of exhaustion, and with a startled cry ran to his side.
"Oh, dearie! dearie!" she cried. "Pull yourself together! Oh, do try
to pull yourself together." She caught his cold hands and began to
rub them, murmuring words of endearment like a mother over a young
child. Lupin did not open his eyes; Charolais came in.
"Oh, what a life you lead!" said Victoire, or, to be exact, she
wailed it. "Are you never going to change? You're as white as a
sheet. . . . Can't you speak, dearie?"
"Yes. You needn't tell the others, though. But I've had a night of
it . . . I did play the fool so . . . I must have been absolutely
mad. Once I had changed the coronet under that fat old fool Gournay-
Martin's very eyes . . . once you and Sonia were out of their
clutches, all I had to do was to slip away. Did I? Not a hit of it!
I stayed there out of sheer bravado, just to score off Guerchard. .
. . And then I . . . I, who pride myself on being as cool as a
cucumber . . . I did the one thing I ought not to have done. . . .
Instead of going quietly away as the Duke of Charmerace . . . what
do you think I did? . . . I bolted . . . I started running . . .
running like a thief. . . . In about two seconds I saw the slip I
had made. It did not take me longer; but that was too long--
Guerchard's men were on my track . . . I was done for."
"As soon as the first paralysis had passed, Guerchard dared to see
clearly . . . to see the truth," said Lupin. "And then it was a
chase. There were ten--fifteen of them on my heels. Out of breath--
grunting, furious--a mob--a regular mob. I had passed the night
before in a motor-car. I was dead beat. In fact, I was done for
before I started . . . and they were gaining ground all the time."
"For a long while they were too close. They must have been within
five feet of me. I was done. Then I was crossing one of the bridges.
. . . There was the Seine . . . handy . . . I made up my mind that,
rather than be taken, I'd make an end of it . . . I'd throw myself
over."
"Well, there I was, outside Paris, and I'm hanged if I know where. I
went on half a mile, and then I rested. Oh, how sleepy I was! I
would have given a hundred thousand francs for an hour's sleep--
cheerfully. But I dared not let myself sleep. I had to get back here
unseen. There were you and Sonia."
"Sonia? Another woman?" cried Victoire. "Oh, it's then that I'm
frightened . . . when you get a woman mixed up in your game. Always,
when you come to grief . . . when you really get into danger,
there's a woman in it."
CHAPTER XXI
Victoire and Charolais were quick laying the table. Charolais kept
up a running fire of questions as he did it; but Lupin did not
trouble to answer them. He lay back, relaxed, drawing deep breaths.
Already his lips had lost their greyness, and were pink; there was a
suggestion of blood under the skin of his pale face. They soon had
the table laid; and he walked to it on fairly steady feet. He sat
down; Charolais whipped off a cover, and said:
"Anyhow, you've got out of the mess neatly. It was a jolly smart
escape."
"Oh, yes. So far it's all right," said Lupin. "But there's going to
be trouble presently--lots of it. I shall want all my wits. We all
shall."
He fell upon his breakfast with the appetite but not the manners of
a wolf. Charolais went out of the room. Victoire hovered about him,
pouring out his coffee and putting sugar into it.
"By Jove, how good these eggs are!" he said. "I think that, of all
the thousand ways of cooking eggs, en cocotte is the best."
"Oh, yes; it's all very well to talk," said Victoire, in a scolding
tone; for since he was better, she felt, as a good woman should,
that the time had come to put in a word out of season. "But, all the
same, you're trying to kill yourself--that's what you're doing. Just
because you're young you abuse your youth. It won't last for ever;
and you'll be sorry you used it up before it's time. And this life
of lies and thefts and of all kinds of improper things--I suppose
it's going to begin all over again. It's no good your getting a
lesson. It's just thrown away upon you."
"It's all very well your pretending not to listen to me, when you
know very well that I'm speaking for your good," she went on,
raising her voice a little. "But I tell you that all this is going
to end badly. To be a thief gives you no position in the world--no
position at all--and when I think of what you made me do the night
before last, I'm just horrified at myself."
"We'd better not talk about that--the mess you made of it! It was
positively excruciating!" said Lupin.
"And what did you expect? I'm an honest woman, I am!" said Victoire
sharply. "I wasn't brought up to do things like that, thank
goodness! And to begin at my time of life!"
"It's true, and I often ask myself how you bring yourself to stick
to me," said Lupin, in a reflective, quite impersonal tone. "Please
pour me out another cup of coffee."
"That's what I'm always asking myself," said Victoire, pouring out
the coffee. "I don't know--I give it up. I suppose it is because I'm
fond of you."
"Yes, and I'm very fond of you, my dear Victoire," said Lupin, in a
coaxing tone.
"And then, look you, there are things that there's no understanding.
I often talked to your poor mother about them. Oh, your poor mother!
Whatever would she have said to these goings-on?"
"Oh, nothing you did would have surprised her," said Victoire. "When
you were quite a little boy you were always making us wonder. You
gave yourself such airs, and you had such nice manners of your own--
altogether different from the other boys. And you were already a bad
boy, when you were only seven years old, full of all kinds of
tricks; and already you had begun to steal."
"I know very well that you're all right at heart," said Victoire.
"Of course you only rob the rich, and you've always been kind to the
poor. . . . Yes; there's no doubt about it: you have a good heart."
"Well, you ought to have different ideas in your head. Why are you a
burglar?"
"Is that true? Have you really been thinking of it?" cried Victoire
joyfully.
"Yes," said Lupin, smiling at her eagerness. "I have been thinking
about it--seriously."
"Yes," said Lupin softly; and his eyes were shining in a very grave
face.
"Well, since you ask me, she's a thief," said Lupin with a
mischievous smile.
"But she's a very charming thief," said Lupin; and he rose smiling.
"Well, that's something," said Victoire; and her blank and fallen
face brightened a little.
Lupin walked up and down the room, breathing out long luxurious
puffs of smoke from his excellent cigar, and watching Victoire with
a humorous eye. He walked across to his book-shelf, and scanned the
titles of his books with an appreciative, almost affectionate smile.
The door opened and Charolais bustled in: "Shall I clear away the
breakfast?" he said.
Lupin nodded; and then the telephone bell rang. He put his finger on
his lips and went to it.
"Then why did they chase you last night?" said Charolais.
He went into his bedroom and came back with the key of the safe and
a kit-bag. He opened the safe and took out the coronet, the real
coronet of the Princesse de Lamballe, and along with it a pocket-
book with a few papers in it. He set the pocket-book on the table,
ready to put in his coat-pocket when he should have dressed, and
dropped the coronet into the kit-bag.
"Instead of which you went and saved his life," said Charolais, in a
tone of deep discontent; and he went on clearing the table.
"I did, I did: I had grown quite fond of him," said Lupin, with a
meditative air. "For one thing, he was so very like one. I'm not
sure that he wasn't even better-looking."
"No; he was just like you," said Victoire, with decision. "Any one
would have said you were twin brothers."
"It gave me quite a shock the first time I saw his portrait," said
Lupin. "You remember, Charolais? It was three years ago, the day, or
rather the night, of the first Gournay-Martin burglary at
Charmerace. Do you remember?"
"Do I remember?" said Charolais. "It was I who pointed out the
likeness to you. I said, 'He's the very spit of you, master.' And
you said, 'There's something to be done with that, Charolais.' And
then off you started for the ice and snow and found the Duke, and
became his friend; and then he went and died, not that you'd have
helped him to, if he hadn't."
"Ah," said Victoire sadly, "what a pity it is! A few years ago he
would have gone to the Crusades; and to-day he steals coronets. What
a pity it is!"
"I think myself that the best thing we can do is to pack up our
belongings," said Charolais. "And I don't think we've much time to
do it either. This particular game is at an end, you may take it
from me."
"I hope to goodness it is: I want to get back to the country," said
Victoire.
He took up the tray; and they went out of the room. On the landing
they separated; she went upstairs and he went down. Presently he
came up with the shaving water and shaved his master; for in the
house in University Street he discharged the double functions of
valet and butler. He had just finished his task when there came a
ring at the front-door bell.
He put away the razor leisurely, and went. On the stairs he found
Bonavent, mounting--Bonavent, disguised in the livery and fierce
moustache of a porter from the Ritz.
"I didn't know that there was one," said Bonavent humbly. "Well, you
ought to have known that there was; and it's plain enough to see.
What is it you want?" said Charolais.
"No, no; I'm to give it into the hands of the Duke himself and to
nobody else," said Bonavent.
"Here! where are you going to? Wait here," said Charolais quickly.
"Take a chair; sit down."
Bonavent sat down with a very stolid air, and Charolais looked at
him doubtfully, in two minds whether to leave him there alone or
not. Before he had decided there came a thundering knock on the
front door, not only loud but protracted. Charolais looked round
with a scared air; and then ran out of the room and down the stairs.
On the instant Bonavent was on his feet, and very far from stolid.
He opened the door of the smoking-room very gently and peered in. It
was empty. He slipped noiselessly across the room, a pair of
clippers ready in his hand, and cut the wires of the telephone. His
quick eye glanced round the room and fell on the pocket-book on the
table. He snatched it up, and slipped it into the breast of his
tunic. He had scarcely done it--one button of his tunic was still to
fasten--when the bedroom door opened, and Lupin came out:
"What do you want?" he said sharply; and his keen eyes scanned the
porter with a disquieting penetration.
There was a faint glitter in his eyes; but Bonavent missed it.
Charolais came into the room, and said, in a grumbling tone, "A run-
away knock. I wish I could catch the brats; I'd warm them. They
wouldn't go fetching me away from my work again, in a hurry, I can
tell you."
Lupin opened the letter, and read it. As he read it, at first he
frowned; then he smiled; and then he laughed joyously. It ran:
"SIR,"
"She does write in shocking bad taste," said Lupin, shaking his head
sadly. "Charolais, sit down and write a letter for me."
"MADEMOISELLE,"
"Why not?" said Lupin. "It's your charming name, isn't it?"
Bonavent took the letter, turned, and had taken one step towards the
door when Lupin sprang. His arm went round the detective's neck; he
jerked him backwards off his feet, scragging him.
"Stir, and I'll break your neck!" he cried in a terrible voice; and
then he said quietly to Charolais, "Just take my pocket-book out of
this fellow's tunic."
Charolais, with deft fingers, ripped open the detective's tunic, and
took out the pocket-book.
"This is what they call Jiu-jitsu, old chap! You'll be able to teach
it to your colleagues," said Lupin. He loosed his grip on Bonavent,
and knocked him straight with a thump in the back, and sent him
flying across the room. Then he took the pocket-book from Charolais
and made sure that its contents were untouched.
CHAPTER XXII
THE BARGAIN
Charolais conducted the detective down the stairs and let him out of
the front door, cursing and threatening vengeance as he went.
Charolais took no notice of his words--he was the well-trained
servant. He came back upstairs, and on the landing called to
Victoire and Bernard. They came hurrying down; and the three of them
went into the smoking-room.
"Well, slip out by the secret entrance. They haven't found that
yet," said Lupin. "And meet me at the house at Passy."
Charolais and Bernard wanted no more telling; they ran to the book-
case and pressed the buttons; the book-case slid aside; the doors
opened and disclosed the lift. They stepped into it. Victoire had
followed them. She paused and said: "And you? Are you coming?"
"I'll wait for him. You go on," said Victoire; and the lift went
down.
Lupin went to the telephone, rang the bell, and put the receiver to
his ear.
"I must. If I don't telephone Sonia will come here. She will run
right into Guerchard's arms. Why the devil don't they answer? They
must be deaf!" And he rang the bell again.
"Go to her? But I don't know where she is. I lost my head last
night," cried Lupin, suddenly anxious himself. "Are you there?" he
shouted into the telephone. "She's at a little hotel near the Star.
. . . Are you there? . . . But there are twenty hotels near the
Star. . . . Are you there? . . . Oh, I did lose my head last night.
. . . Are you there? Oh, hang this telephone! Here I'm fighting with
a piece of furniture. And every second is important!"
He picked up the machine, shook it, saw that the wires were cut, and
cried furiously: "Ha! They've played the telephone trick on me!
That's Guerchard. . . . The swine!"
"But there's nothing more for you to do here, since you can no
longer telephone," said Victoire, bewildered.
Lupin caught her arm and shook her, staring into her face with
panic-stricken eyes. "But don't you understand that, since I haven't
telephoned, she'll come here?" he cried hoarsely. "Five-and-twenty
minutes past eight! At half-past eight she will start--start to come
here."
His face had suddenly grown haggard; this new fear had brought back
all the exhaustion of the night; his eyes were panic-stricken.
"What about her?" said Lupin; and his voice thrilled with anguished
dread.
"I prefer it," said Lupin slowly, with a suddenly stubborn air.
"But they're coming to take you," cried Victoire, gripping his arm.
"Take me?" cried Lupin, freeing himself quietly from her grip. And
he stood frowning, plunged in deep thought, weighing the chances,
the risks, seeking a plan, saving devices.
"Oh, hush, hush!" said Victoire. "I know very well that you're
capable of anything . . . and they too--they'll destroy you. No,
look you, you must go. They won't do anything to her--a child like
that--so frail. She'll get off quite easily. You're coming, aren't
you?"
"Make me stir if you can. I'm as fond of you as she is--you know I
am," said Victoire, and her face set stonily obstinate.
Lupin begged her to go; ordered her to go; he seized her by the
shoulder, shook her, and abused her like a pickpocket. She would not
stir. He abandoned the effort, sat down, and knitted his brow again
in profound and painful thought, working out his plan. Now and again
his eyes flashed, once or twice they twinkled. Victoire watched his
face with just the faintest hope on her own.
He sprang to his feet with shining eyes. His lips were curved in a
fighting smile. "The game isn't lost yet," he said in a tense, quiet
voice. "I'm going to play it to the end. I've a card or two left
still--good cards. I'm still the Duke of Charmerace." He turned to
her.
"Now listen to me," he said. "Go down and open the door for him."
"Yes, I do. Listen to me carefully. When you have opened the door,
slip out of it and watch the house. Don't go too far from it. Look
out for Sonia. You'll see her coining. Stop her from entering,
Victoire--stop her from entering." He spoke coolly, but his voice
shook on the last words.
"He won't. When he comes in, stand behind the door. He will be too
eager to get to me to stop for you. Besides, for him you don't count
in the game. Once you're out of the house, I'll hold him here for--
for half an hour. That will leave a margin. Sonia will hurry here.
She should be here in twelve minutes. Get her away to the house at
Passy. If I don't come keep her there; she's to live with you. But I
shall come."
The bell rang again. They were at the top of the stairs.
"Never mind, you must go all the same," said Lupin. "Don't give up
hope--trust to me. Go--go--for my sake."
"I'm going, dearie," said Victoire; and she went down the stairs
steadily, with a brave air.
He turned, went into the smoking-room, and shut the door. He sat
quietly down in an easy chair, lighted a cigarette, and took up a
paper. He heard the noise of the traffic in the street grow louder
as the front door was opened. There was a pause; then he heard the
door bang. There was the sound of a hasty footstep on the stairs;
the door flew open, and Guerchard bounced into the room.
"No, thank you: the time has passed quite quickly. I have so much to
do in the morning always," said Lupin. "I hope you had a good night
after that unfortunate business of the coronet. That was a disaster;
and so unexpected too."
"It's central," said Lupin carelessly. "You must please excuse me,
if I cannot receive you as I should like; but all my servants have
bolted. Those confounded detectives of yours have frightened them
away."
"You needn't bother about that. I shall catch them," said Guerchard.
"If you do, I'm sure I wish you joy of them. Do, please, keep your
hat on," said Lupin with ironic politeness.
Guerchard came slowly to the middle of the room, raising his hand to
his hat, letting it fall again without taking it off. He sat down
slowly facing him, and they gazed at one another with the wary eyes
of duellists crossing swords at the beginning of a duel.
"Well, that ought to cover me pretty well. Why don't you arrest me?
What are you waiting for?" said Lupin. His face was entirely serene,
his eyes were careless, his tone indifferent.
"I ask if you know where Sonia Kritchnoff is?" said Guerchard
slowly, lingering over the words.
"In a small hotel near the Star. The hotel has a telephone; and you
can make sure," said Guerchard.
Lupin shock his head with a careless smile, and said, "Why should I
telephone to her? What are you driving at?"
"Evidently nothing. For, after all, what has that child got to do
with you? You're not interested in her, plainly. She's not big
enough game for you. It's me you are hunting . . . it's me you hate
. . . it's me you want. I've played you tricks enough for that, you
old scoundrel. So you're going to leave that child in peace? . . .
You're not going to revenge yourself on her? . . . It's all very
well for you to be a policeman; it's all very well for you to hate
me; but there are things one does not do." There was a ring of
menace and appeal in the deep, ringing tones of his voice. "You're
not going to do that, Guerchard. . . . You will not do it. . . . Me-
-yes--anything you like. But her--her you must not touch." He gazed
at the detective with fierce, appealing eyes.
"Have you?" said Lupin; and his watchful face was serene again, his
smile almost pleasant.
"Well, what is it you want?" said Lupin. "Out with it! Don't be shy
about it."
"You offer me?" cried Lupin. "Then it isn't true. You're fooling
me."
"Then you are sincere," said Lupin. "And putting me out of the
question?"
"Don't play the fool. You care only for a single person in the
world. I hold you through her: Sonia Kritchnoff."
Lupin rose and walked backwards and forwards across the room,
frowning, calculating, glancing keenly at Guerchard, weighing him.
Twice he looked at the clock.
He stopped and said coldly: "So be it. For the moment you're the
stronger. . . . That won't last. . . . But you offer me this child's
liberty."
"Can you do it?" said Lupin, with a sudden air of doubt; and he
looked sharply from Guerchard to the clock.
"Oh, I'll put the thefts on your shoulders. That will let her out
all right," said Guerchard,
"If ever I commit suicide, you'll know all about it, my good
Guerchard. You'll be there. You may even join me," said Lupin
grimly; he resumed his pacing up and down the room.
"Done for, yes; I shall be done for," he said presently. "The fact
is, you want my skin."
Lupin laughed: "I can give you a glass of port," he said, "but I'm
afraid that's all I can do for you."
"Yes; and I'll throw her in. She shall go scot-free. I won't bother
with her," said Guerchard eagerly.
He stood listening with all his ears. There were footsteps on the
stairs, and the door opened. Dieusy stood on the threshold.
"Who is it?" said Guerchard.
"I'm going to gaol that girl," said Guerchard savagely; and he took
a step towards the door.
"You swine!" said Lupin. "You know well enough that I can do it--on
my head--with a feeble child like that; and you know your Code; five
years is the minimum," said Guerchard, in a tone of relentless
brutality, watching him carefully, sticking to his hope.
"By Jove, I could wring your neck!" said Lupin, trembling with fury.
By a violent effort he controlled himself, and said thoughtfully,
"After all, if I give up everything to you, I shall be free to take
it back one of these days."
"Do you accept?" said Guerchard. And again his voice quivered with
anxiety.
Dieusy opened the door, put in his head, and said, "It's
Mademoiselle Kritchnoff."
"Never! You shan't touch her! By Heaven, you shan't touch her!"
cried Lupin frantically; and he sprang like a tiger at Guerchard.
Guerchard jumped to the other side of the table. "Will you accept,
then?" he cried.
Lupin gripped the edge of the table with both hands, and stood
panting, grinding his teeth, pale with fury. He stood silent and
motionless for perhaps half a minute, gazing at Guerchard with
burning, murderous eyes. Then he nodded his head.
Guerchard snatched up the kit-bag, opened it, and took out the
coronet.
"Are you sure it's the real one?" said Lupin, in a tone of acute but
affected anxiety. "Do not--oh, do not let us have any more of these
painful mistakes about it. They are so wearing."
"They weren't in the bond," said Lupin. "But here you are." And he
threw his revolver on the table.
CHAPTER XXIII
"The handcuffs?" said Lupin; and his face fell. Then it cleared; and
he added lightly, "After all, there's nothing like being careful;
and, by Jove, with me you need to be. I might get away yet. What
luck it is for you that I'm so soft, so little of a Charmerace, so
human! Truly, I can't be much of a man of the world, to be in love
like this!"
"Come, come, hold out your hands!" said Guerchard, jingling the
handcuffs impatiently.
"I should like to see that child for the last time," said Lupin
gently.
Lupin gazed down at them with a bitter face, and said: "Oh, you are
in luck! You're not married by any chance?"
"Yes, yes; I am," said Guerchard hastily; and he went quickly to the
door and opened it: "Dieusy!" he called. "Dieusy! Mademoiselle
Kritchnoff is at liberty. Tell her so, and bring her in here."
"If you've quite made up your mind," said Guerchard impatiently, and
he went into the anteroom.
She came through the open door, flushed deliciously and smiling, her
eyes brimming with tears of joy. Lupin had never seen her look half
so adorable.
"Is it to you I owe it? Then I shall owe everything to you. Oh,
thank you--thank you!" she cried, holding out her hands to him.
She misunderstood the movement. Her face fell suddenly like that
of a child rebuked: "Oh, I was wrong. I was wrong to come here!" she
cried quickly, in changed, dolorous tones. "I thought
yesterday . . . I made a mistake . . . pardon me. I'm going. I'm
going."
"But, after all, you're right," she said, in a gentler voice. "One
can't wipe out what one has done. If I were to give back everything
I've taken--if I were to spend years in remorse and repentance, it
would be no use. In your eyes I should always be Sonia Kritchnoff,
the thief!" The great tears welled slowly out of her eyes and rolled
down her cheeks; she let them stream unheeded.
But she would not hear him. She broke out with fresh vehemence, a
feverish passion: "And yet, if I'd been a thief, like so many
others. . . but you know why I stole. I'm not trying to defend
myself, but, after all, I did it to keep honest; and when I loved
you it was not the heart of a thief that thrilled, it was the heart
of a poor girl who loved. . .that's all. . .who loved."
"You don't know what you're doing! You're torturing me! Be quiet!"
cried Lupin hoarsely, beside himself.
"Never mind. . .I'm going. . .we shall never see one another any
more," she sobbed. "But will you. . .will you shake hands just for
the last time?"
"Wait, Sonia! Wait!" cried Lupin hoarsely. "A moment ago you said
something. . . . You said that the mere presence of a thief would
overwhelm you with disgust. Is that true?"
"And if I were not the man you believe?" said Lupin sombrely.
"What?" said Sonia; and a faint bewilderment mingled with her grief.
"If I were not the Duke of Charmerace?"
Lupin turned and held out his manacled wrists for her to see.
She sprang to him, threw her arms round his neck, and pressed her
lips to his.
"Upon my soul, I will!" cried Lupin; and he kissed her again and
again.
Guerchard came back into the room. He looked at them with a cynical
grin, and said, "Time's up."
"Oh, Guerchard, after so many others, I owe you the best minute of
my life!" cried Lupin.
"Now you must keep calm and go. I'm not going to prison," said
Lupin, in a low voice. "Wait in the hall, if you can. Stop and talk
to Victoire; condole with her. If they turn you out of the house,
wait close to the front door."
She went quietly out of the room, her handkerchief to her eyes.
Guerchard held open the door for her, and kept it open, with his
hand still on the handle; he said to Lupin: "Come along."
"Really, you do say the most unlucky things," said Lupin gaily.
"Do you mean that you refuse to come?" cried Guerchard in a rough,
threatening tone.
"No," said Lupin, "after all, it's too early." Once more he
stretched himself out on the couch, and added languidly, "I'm
lunching at the English Embassy."
"You know them?" said Lupin with a smile, rising. "It's fatality!"
"Did you know that trick, Guerchard? One of these days I shall teach
you to invite me to lunch," he said slowly, in a mocking tone; and
he gazed at the detective with menacing, dangerous eyes.
"I think the fat's in the fire now," said Lupin, laughing.
He sprang to the table, opened the cardboard box, whipped off the
top layer of cotton-wool, and took out a shining bomb.
"You silly funks!" roared Guerchard. "Do you think he'd dare?"
As one man his detectives threw themselves upon him. Three of them
gripped his arms, a fourth gripped him round the waist; and they all
shouted at him together, not to be a madman! . . . To look at
Lupin's eyes! . . . That Lupin was off his head!
"What miserable swine you are!" cried Lupin scornfully. He sprang
forward, caught up the kit-bag in his left hand, and tossed it
behind him into the lift. "You dirty crew!" he cried again. "Oh, why
isn't there a photographer here? And now, Guerchard, you thief, give
me back my pocket-book."
"Come, come, it's got to be given to him," cried Bonavent. "Hold the
master tight!" And he thrust his hand into the breast of Guerchard's
coat, and tore out the pocket-book.
The whole group fell back with an odd, unanimous, sighing groan.
Lupin sprang into the lift, and the doors closed over the opening.
There was a great sigh of relief from the frightened detectives, and
then the chunking of machinery as the lift sank.
The others ran out of the room and down the stairs, but with no
great heartiness, since their minds were still quite full of the
bomb, and Lupin still had it with him. Guerchard and Dieusy dashed
at the doors of the opening of the lift-well, pulling and wrenching
at them. Suddenly there was a click; and they heard the grunting of
the machinery. There was a little bump and a jerk, the doors flew
open of themselves; and there was the lift, empty, ready for them.
They jumped into it; Guerchard's quick eye caught the button, and he
pressed it. The doors banged to, and, to his horror, the lift shot
upwards about eight feet, and stuck between the floors.
He sat before a mirror in the wall of the lift, a make-up box on the
seat beside him. He darkened his eyebrows, and put a line or two
about his eyes. That done he looked at himself earnestly for two or
three minutes; and, as he looked, a truly marvellous transformation
took place: the features of Arsene Lupin, of the Duke of Charmerace,
decomposed, actually decomposed, into the features of Jean
Guerchard. He looked at himself and laughed, the gentle, husky laugh
of Guerchard.
The policeman looked up, recognized the great detective, and came
bounding zealously up the stairs.
Lupin led the way through the anteroom into the sitting-room. Then
he said sharply: "You have your revolver?"
"Put it away! Put it away at once!" said Lupin very smartly. "You're
not to use it. You're not to use it on any account! You understand?"
"Yes," said the policeman firmly; and with a slightly bewildered air
he put the revolver away.
"Here! Stand here!" cried Lupin, raising his voice. And he caught
the policeman's arm, and hustled him roughly to the front of the
doors of the lift-well. "Do you see these doors? Do you see them?"
he snapped.
"Yes, yes," said the policeman, glaring at them.
"They're the doors of a lift," said Lupin. "In that lift are Dieusy
and Lupin. You know Dieusy?"
"There are only Dieusy and Lupin in the lift. They are struggling
together. You can hear them," shouted Lupin in the policeman's ear.
"Lupin is disguised. You understand--Dieusy and a disguised man are
in the lift. The disguised man is Lupin. Directly the lift descends
and the doors open, throw yourself on him! Hold him! Shout for
assistance!" He almost bellowed the last words into the policeman's
ear.
"Yes, yes," said the policeman. And he braced himself before the
doors of the lift-well, gazing at them with harried eyes, as if he
expected them to bite him.
Lupin went quietly down the stairs. Victoire and Sonia saw him
coming. Victoire rose; and as he came to the bottom of the stairs
Sonia stepped forward and said in an anxious, pleading voice:
"Just look how like him I am!" said Lupin, laughing triumphantly.
"But do I look quite ruffian enough?"
"This time the Duke of Charmerace is dead, for good and all," said
Lupin.
"It would be a terrible loss, you know--a loss for France," said
Lupin gravely.
"Never mind," said Sonia.
"And you won't steal any more?" said Sonia, holding him back with
both hands on his shoulders, looking into his eyes.
"I shouldn't dream of such a thing," said Lupin. "You are here.
Guerchard is in the lift. What more could I possibly desire?" His
voice softened and grew infinitely caressing as he went on: "Yet
when you are at my side I shall always have the soul of a lover and
the soul of a thief. I long to steal your kisses, your thoughts, the
whole of your heart. Ah, Sonia, if you want me to steal nothing
else, you have only to stay by my side."
Sonia drew herself out of his arms and cried, "But we're wasting
time! We must make haste! We must fly!"
"Fly?" said Lupin sharply. "No, thank you; never again. I did flying
enough last night to last me a lifetime. For the rest of my life I'm
going to crawl--crawl like a snail. But come along, you two, I must
take you to the police-station."
He opened the front door, and they came out on the steps. The
policeman in charge of the car saluted.
Lupin paused and said softly: "Hark! I hear the sound of wedding
bells."
Even as they were getting into the car some chance blow of Guerchard
or Dieusy struck a hidden spring and released the lift. It sank to
the level of Lupin's smoking-room and stopped. The doors flew open,
Dieusy and Guerchard sprang out of it; and on the instant the brown-
faced, nervous policeman sprang actively on Guerchard and pinned
him. Taken by surprise, Guerchard yelled loudly, "You stupid idiot!"
somehow entangled his legs in those of his captor, and they rolled
on the floor. Dieusy surveyed them for a moment with blank
astonishment. Then, with swift intelligence, grasped the fact that
the policeman was Lupin in disguise. He sprang upon them, tore them
asunder, fell heavily on the policeman, and pinned him to the floor
with a strangling hand on his throat.
Guerchard dashed to the door, tried it, and found it locked, dashed
for the window, threw it open, and thrust out his head. Forty yards
down the street a motor-car was rolling smoothly away--rolling to a
honeymoon.