III
GENTLEMEN
AND PLAYERS
OLD Raffles may or may not
have been an exceptional criminal, but
as a cricketer I dare swear he was unique. Himself a dangerous bat, a
brilliant field, and perhaps the very finest slow bowler of his decade,
he took
incredibly little interest in the game at large. He never went up to
Lord’s
without his cricket-bag, or showed the slightest interest in the result
of a
match in which he was not himself engaged. Nor was this mere hateful
egotism on
his part. He professed to have lost all enthusiasm for the game, and to
keep it
up only from the very lowest motives.
“Cricket,” said Raffles,
“like
everything else, is good enough sport until you discover a better. As
a source
of excitement it isn’t in it with other things you wot of, Bunny, and
the
involuntary comparison becomes a bore. What’s the satisfaction of
taking a
man’s wicket when you want his spoons? Still, if you can bowl a bit your low
cunning
won’t get rusty, and always looking for the weak spot’s just the kind
of mental
exercise one wants. Yes, perhaps there’s some affinity between the two
things
after all. But I’d chuck up cricket to-morrow, Bunny, if it wasn’t for
the
glorious protection it affords a person of my proclivities.”
“How so?” said I. “It
brings
you before the public, I should have thought, far more than is either
safe or
wise.”
“My dear Bunny, that’s
exactly where you make a mistake. To follow Crime with reasonable
impunity you
simply must have a parallel, ostensible career — the more
public the
better. The principle is obvious. Mr. Peace, of pious memory, disarmed
suspicion
by acquiring a local reputation for playing the fiddle and taming
animals, and
it’s my profound conviction that Jack the Ripper was a really eminent
public
man, whose speeches were very likely reported alongside his atrocities.
Fill
the bill in some prominent part, and you’ll never be suspected of
doubling it
with another of equal prominence. That’s why I want you to cultivate
journalism, my boy, and sign all you can. And it’s the one and only
reason why
I don’t burn my bats for firewood.”
Nevertheless, when he did
play there was no keener performer on the field, nor one more anxious
to do
well for his side. I remember how he went to the nets, before the
first match
of the season, with his pocket full of sovereigns, which he put on the
stumps
instead of bails. It was a sight to see the professionals bowling like
demons
for the hard cash, for whenever a stump was hit a pound was tossed to
the
bowler and another balanced in its stead, while one man took £3 with a
ball
that spread-eagled the wicket. Raffles’s practice cost him either
eight or
nine sovereigns; but he had absolutely first-class bowling all the time; and
he made fifty-seven runs next day.
It became my pleasure to
accompany him to all his matches, to watch every ball he bowled, or
played, or
fielded, and to sit chatting with him in the pavilion when he was doing
none of
these three things. You might have seen us there, side by side, during
the
greater part of the Gentlemen’s first innings against the Players (who
had lost
the toss) on the second Monday in July. We were to be seen, but not
heard, for
Raffles had failed to score, and was uncommonly cross for a player who
cared
so little for the game. Merely taciturn with me, he was positively rude
to more
than one member who wanted to know how it had happened, or who ventured
to
commiserate him on his luck; there he sat, with a straw hat tilted over
his nose
and a cigarette stuck between lips that curled disagreeably at every
advance.
I was therefore much surprised when a young fellow of the exquisite
type came
and squeezed himself in between us, and met with a perfectly civil
reception despite
the liberty. I did not know the boy by sight, nor did Raffles introduce
us; but
their conversation proclaimed at once a slightness of acquaintanceship
and a
licence on the lad’s part which combined to puzzle me. Mystification
reached
its height when Raffles was informed that the other’s father was
anxious to
meet him, and he instantly consented to gratify that whim.
“He’s in the Ladies’
Enclosure. Will you come round now?”
“With pleasure,” says
Raffles. “Keep a place for me, Bunny.”
And they were gone.
“Young Crowley,” said some
voice further back. “Last year’s Harrow Eleven.”
“I remember him. Worst man
in the team.”
“Keen cricketer, however.
Stopped till he was twenty to get his colours. Governor made him. Keen
breed.
Oh, pretty, sir! Very pretty!”
The game was boring me. I
only came to see old Raffles perform. Soon I was looking wistfully for
his
return, and at length I saw him beckoning me from the palings to the
right.
“Want to introduce you to
old Amersteth,” he whispered, when I joined him. “They’ve a cricket
week next
month, when this boy Crowley comes of age, and we’ve both got to go
down and
play.”
“Both!” I echoed. “But I’m
no cricketer!”
“Shut up,” says Raffles.
“Leave
that to me. I’ve been lying for all I’m worth,” he added sepulchrally
as we
reached the bottom of the steps. “I trust to you not to give the show
away.”
There was the gleam in his
eye that I knew well enough elsewhere, but was unprepared for in those
healthy, sane surroundings; and it was with very definite misgivings
and
surmises that I followed the Zingari blazer through the vast flower-bed
of hats
and bonnets that bloomed beneath the ladies’ awning.
Lord Amersteth was a
fine-looking man with a short moustache and a double chin. He received
me with
much dry courtesy, through which, however, it was not difficult to read
a less
flattering tale. I was accepted as the inevitable appendage of the
invaluable
Raffles, with whom I felt deeply incensed as I made my bow.
“I have been bold enough,”
said Lord Amersteth, “to ask one of the Gentlemen of England to come
down and
play some rustic cricket for us next month. He is kind enough to say
that he
would have liked nothing better, but for this little fishing
expedition of
yours, Mr. — , Mr. — ,” and Lord Amersteth succeeded in remembering my
name.
It was, of course, the
first
I had ever heard of that fishing expedition, but I made haste to say
that it
could easily, and should certainly, be put off. Raffles gleamed
approval through
his eyelashes. Lord Amersteth bowed and shrugged.
“You’re very good, I’m
sure,” said he. “But I understand you’re a cricketer yourself?”
“He was one at school,”
said
Raffles, with infamous readiness.
“Not a real cricketer,” I
was stammering meanwhile.
“In the eleven?” said Lord
Amersteth.
“I’m afraid not,” said I.
“But only just out of
it,”
declared Raffles, to my horror.
“Well, well, we can’t all
play for the Gentlemen,” said Lord Amersteth slyly. “My son Crowley
only just
scraped into the eleven at Harrow, and he’s going to
play. I may even come in myself at a pinch; so you
won’t be the
only duffer, if you are one, and I shall be very glad if you will come
down and
help us too. You shall flog a stream before breakfast and after dinner,
if you
like.”
“I should be very proud,”
I
was beginning, as the mere prelude to resolute excuses; but the eye of
Raffles
opened wide upon me; and I hesitated weakly, to be duly lost.
“Then that’s settled,”
said
Lord Amersteth, with the slightest suspicion of grimness. “It’s to be
a little
week, you know, when my son comes of age. We play the Free Foresters,
the Dorsetshire
Gentlemen, and probably some local lot as well. But Mr. Raffles will
tell you
all about it, and Crowley shall write. Another wicket! By Jove, they’re
all
out! Then I rely on you both.” And, with a little nod, Lord Amersteth
rose and
sidled to the gangway. Raffles rose also, but I caught the sleeve of
his
blazer.
“What are you thinking
of?”
I whispered savagely. “I was nowhere near the eleven. I’m no sort of
cricketer.
I shall have to get out of this!”
“Not you,” he whispered
back. “You needn’t play, but come you must. If you wait for me after
half-past six
I’ll tell you why.”
But I could guess the
reason; and I am ashamed to say that it revolted me much less than did
the
notion of making a public fool of myself on a cricket-field. My gorge
rose at
this as it no longer rose at crime, and it was in no tranquil humour
that I
strolled about the ground while Raffles disappeared in the pavilion.
Nor was
my annoyance lessened by a little meeting I witnessed between young
Crowley and
his father, who shrugged as he stopped and stooped to convey some
information
which made the young man look a little blank. It may have been pure
self-consciousness on my part, but I could have sworn that the trouble
was
their inability to secure the great Raffles without his insignificant
friend.
Then the bell rang, and I
climbed to the top of the pavilion to watch Raffles bowl.
No subtleties are lost up
there; and if ever a bowler was full of them, it was A. J. Raffles on
this
day, as, indeed, all the cricket world remembers. One had not to be a
cricketer
oneself to appreciate his perfect command of pitch and break, his
beautifully
easy action, which never varied with the varying pace, his great ball
on the leg-stump
— his dropping head-ball — in a word, the infinite ingenuity of that
versatile
attack. It was no mere exhibition of athletic prowess, it was an
intellectual
treat, and one with a special significance in my eyes. I saw the
“affinity
between the two things,” saw it in that afternoon’s tireless warfare
against
the flower of professional cricket. It was not that Raffles took many
wickets
for few runs; he was too fine a bowler to mind being hit; and time was
short,
and the wicket good. What I admired, and what I remember, was the
combination
of resource and cunning, of patience and precision, of head-work and
handiwork, which made every over an artistic whole. It was all so
characteristic of that other Raffles whom I alone knew!
“I felt like bowling this
afternoon,” he told me later in the hansom. “With a pitch to help me,
I’d have
done something big; as it is, three for forty-one, out of the four that
fell,
isn’t so bad for a slow bowler on a plumb wicket against those fellows.
But I
felt venomous! Nothing riles me more than being asked about for my
cricket as
though I were a pro. myself.”
“Then why on earth go?”
“To punish them, and —
because we shall be jolly hard up, Bunny, before the season’s over!”
“Ah!” said
I. “I thought it was
that.”
“Of course, it was! It
seems
they’re going to have the very devil of a week of it
— balls — dinner-parties — swagger house-party — general
junketings — and obviously a houseful of diamonds as well. Diamonds
galore! As
a general rule nothing would induce me to abuse my position as a guest.
I’ve
never done it, Bunny. But in this case we’re engaged like the waiters
and the
band, and by heaven we’ll take our toll! Let’s have a quiet dinner
somewhere
and talk it over.”
“It seems rather a vulgar
sort
of theft,” I could not help saying; and to this, my single protest,
Raffles
instantly assented.
“It is a vulgar sort,”
said
he; “but I can’t help that. We’re getting vulgarly hard up again, and
there’s
an end on ‘t. Besides, these people deserve it, and can afford it. And
don’t
you run away with the idea that all will be plain sailing; nothing
will be
easier than getting some stuff, and nothing harder than avoiding all
suspicion,
as, of course, we must. We may come away with no more than a good
working plan
of the premises. Who knows? In any case there’s weeks of thinking in it
for you
and me.”
But with those weeks I
will
not weary you further than by remarking that the “thinking,” was done
entirely
by Raffles, who did not always trouble to communicate his thoughts to
me. His
reticence, however, was no longer an irritant. I began to accept it as
a
necessary convention of these little enterprises. And, after our last
adventure
of the kind, more especially after its denouement, my trust in Raffles
was much
too solid to be shaken by a want of trust in me, which I still believe
to have
been more the instinct of the criminal than the judgment of the man.
It was on Monday, the
tenth
of August, that we were due at Milchester Abbey, Dorset; and the
beginning of
the month found us cruising about that very county, with fly-rods
actually in
our hands. The idea was that we should acquire at once a local
reputation as
decent fishermen, and some knowledge of the countryside, with a view to
further
and more deliberate operations in the event of an unprofitable week.
There was
another idea which Raffles kept to himself until he had got me down
there.
Then one day he produced a cricket-ball in a meadow we were crossing,
and threw
me catches for an hour together. More hours he spent in bowling to me
on the
nearest green; and, if I was never a cricketer, at least I came nearer
to being
one, by the end of that week, than ever before or since.
Incident began early on
the
Monday. We had sallied forth from a desolate little junction within
quite a few
miles of Milchester, had been caught in a shower, had run for
shelter to
a wayside inn. A florid, overdressed man was drinking in the parlour,
and I
could have sworn it was at the sight of him that Raffles recoiled on
the
threshold, and afterwards insisted on returning to the station through
the
rain. He assured me, however, that the odour of stale ale had almost
knocked
him down. And I had to make what I could of his speculative, downcast
eyes and
knitted brows.
Milchester Abbey is a
grey,
quadrangular pile, deep-set in rich woody country, and twinkling with
triple
rows of quaint windows, every one of which seemed alight as we drove up
just in
time to dress for dinner. The carriage had whirled us under I know not
how
many triumphal arches in process of construction, and past the tents
and flag-poles
of a juicy-looking cricketfield, on which Raffles undertook to bowl up
to his
reputation. But the chief signs of festival were within, where we found
an
enormous house-party assembled, including more persons of pomp,
majesty, and
dominion than I had ever encountered in one room before. I confess I
felt
overpowered. Our errand and my own pretences combined to rob me of an
address
upon which I have sometimes plumed myself; and I have a
grim
recollection of my
nervous relief when dinner was at last announced. I little knew, what
an ordeal
it was to prove.
I had taken in a much less
formidable young lady than might have fallen to my lot. Indeed I began
by
blessing my good fortune in this respect. Miss Melhuish was merely the
rector’s
daughter, and she had only been asked to make an even number. She
informed me
of both facts before the soup reached us, and her subsequent
conversation was
characterised by the same engaging candour. It exposed what was little
short
of a mania for imparting information. I had simply to listen, to nod,
and to be
thankful. When I confessed to knowing very few of those present, even
by sight,
my entertaining companion proceeded to tell me who everybody was,
beginning on
my left and working conscientiously round to her right. This lasted
quite a
long time, and really interested me; but a great deal that followed did
not;
and, obviously to recapture my unworthy attention, Miss Melhuish
suddenly asked
me, in a sensational whisper, whether I could keep a secret.
I said I thought I might,
whereupon another question followed, in still lower and more thrilling
accents:
“Are you afraid of
burglars?”
Burglars! I was roused at
last. The word stabbed me. I repeated it in horrified query.
“So
I’ve found something to
interest you at last!” said Miss Melhuish, in naïve
triumph. “Yes — burglars! But
don’t speak so loud. It’s supposed to be kept a
great secret. I really oughtn’t
to tell you at all!”
“But what is there to
tell?”
I whispered with satisfactory impatience.
“You promise not to speak
of
it?”
“Of course!”
“Well, then, there are
burglars in the neighbourhood.”
“Have they committed any
robberies?”
“Not yet.”
“Then how do you know?”
“They’ve been seen. In the
district. Two well-known London thieves!”
Two! I looked at Raffles.
I
had done so often during the evening, envying him his high spirits, his
iron
nerve, his buoyant wit, his perfect ease and self-possession. But now I
pitied
him; through all my own terror and consternation, I pitied him as he
sat eating
and drinking, and laughing and talking, without a cloud of fear or of
embarrassment on his handsome, taking, daredevil face. I caught up my
champagne
and emptied the glass.
“Who has seen them?” I
then
asked calmly.
“A detective. They were
traced down from town a few days ago. They are believed to have designs
on the
Abbey!”
“But why aren’t they
run in?”
“Exactly what I asked papa
on the way here this evening; he says there is no warrant out against
the men
at present, and all that can be done is to watch their movements.”
“Oh! so they are being
watched?”
“Yes, by a detective who
is
down here on purpose. And I heard Lord Amersteth tell papa that they
had been
seen this afternoon at Warbeck Junction!”
The very place where
Raffles
and I had been caught in the rain! Our stampede from the inn was now
explained;
on the other hand, I was no longer to be taken by surprise by anything
that my
companion might have to tell me; and I succeeded in looking her in the
face
with a smile.
“This is really quite
exciting, Miss Melhuish,” said I. “May I ask how you come to know so
much about
it?”
“It’s papa,” was the
confidential reply. “Lord Amersteth consulted him, and he consulted me.
But for
goodness’ sake don’t let it get about! I can’t think what
tempted me to
tell you!”
“You may trust me, Miss
Melhuish.
But — aren’t you frightened?”
Miss Melhuish giggled.
“Not a bit! They won’t
come
to the rectory. There’s nothing for them there. But look round the
table: look
at the diamonds: look at old Lady Melrose’s necklace alone!”
The Dowager Marchioness of
Melrose
was one of the few persons whom it had been unnecessary to point out to
me. She
sat on Lord Amersteth’s right, flourishing her ear-trumpet, and
drinking
champagne with her usual notorious freedom, as dissipated and kindly a
dame as
the world has ever seen. It was a necklace of diamonds and sapphires
that rose
and fell about her ample neck.
“They say it’s worth five
thousand pounds at least,” continued my companion. “Lady Margaret told
me so
this morning (that’s Lady Margaret next your Mr. Raffles, you know);
and the
old dear will wear them every night. Think what a haul they
would be!
No; we don’t feel in immediate danger at the rectory.”
When the ladies rose, Miss
Melhuish bound me to fresh vows of secrecy; and left me, I should
think, with
some remorse for her indiscretion, but more satisfaction at the
importance
which it had undoubtedly given her in my eyes. The opinion may smack of
vanity,
though, in reality, the very springs of conversation reside in that
same human,
universal itch to thrill the auditor. The peculiarity of Miss Melhuish
was that
she must be thrilling at all costs. And thrilling she had surely been.
I spare you my feelings of
the next two hours. I tried hard to get a word with Raffles, but again
and
again I failed. In the dining-room he and Crowley lit their cigarettes
with the
same match, and had their heads together all the time. In the
drawing-room I
had the mortification of hearing him talk interminable nonsense into
the ear-trumpet
of Lady Melrose, whom he knew in town. Lastly, in the billiard-room,
they had a
great and lengthy pool, while I sat aloof and chafed more than ever in
the
company of a very serious Scotchman, who had arrived since dinner, and
who
would talk of nothing but the recent improvements in instantaneous
photography.
He had not come to play in the matches (he told me), but to obtain for
Lord Amersteth
such a series of cricket photographs as had never been taken before;
whether as
an amateur or a professional photographer I was unable to determine. I
remember, however, seeking distraction in little bursts of resolute
attention
to the conversation of this bore. And so at last the long ordeal ended;
glasses
were emptied, men said good-night, and I followed Raffles to his room.
“It’s all up!” I gasped,
as
he turned up the gas and I shut the door. “We’re being watched. We’ve
been
followed down from town. There’s a detective here on the spot!”
“How do you know?”
asked Raffles, turning upon me quite sharply, but without the least
dismay. And
I told him how I knew.
“Of course,” I added, “it
was the fellow we saw in the inn this afternoon.”
“The detective?” said
Raffles. “Do you mean to say you don’t know a detective when you see
one,
Bunny?”
“If that wasn’t the
fellow,
which is?” Raffles shook his head.
“To think that you’ve been
talking to him for the last hour in the billiard-room and couldn’t spot
what he
was!”
“The Scotch photographer
—”
I paused aghast.
“Scotch he is,” said
Raffles, “and photographer he may be. He is also Inspector Mackenzie
of Scotland
Yard — the very man I sent the message to that night last April. And
you
couldn’t spot who he was in a whole hour! O Bunny, Bunny, you were
never built
for crime!”
“But,” said I, “if that
was Mackenzie, who
was the fellow you bolted from at Warbeck?”
“The man he’s watching.”
“But he’s watching us!”
Raffles looked at me with
a
pitying eye, and shook his head again before handing me his open
cigarette-case.
“I don’t know whether
smoking’s
forbidden in one’s bedroom, but you’d better take one of these and
stand
tight, Bunny, because I’m going to say something offensive.”
I helped myself with a
laugh.
“Say what you like, my
dear
fellow, if it really isn’t you and I that Mackenzie’s after.”
“Well, then, it isn’t, and
it couldn’t be, and nobody but a born Bunny would suppose for a moment
that it
was! Do you seriously think he would sit there and knowingly watch his
man
playing pool under his nose? Well, he might; he’s a cool hand,
Mackenzie; but
I’m not cool enough to win a pool under such conditions. At least I
don’t think
I am; it would be interesting to see. The situation wasn’t free from
strain as
it was, though I knew he wasn’t thinking of us. Crowley told me all
about it
after dinner, you see, and then I’d seen one of the men for myself this
afternoon. You thought it was a detective who made me turn tail at that
inn. I
really don’t know why I didn’t tell you at the time, but it was just
the
opposite. That loud, red-faced brute is one of the cleverest thieves in
London,
and I once had a drink with him and our mutual fence. I was an
Eastender from
tongue to toe at the moment, but you will understand that I don’t run
unnecessary risks of recognition by a brute like that.”
“He’s not alone, I hear.”
“By no means; there’s at
least one other man with him; and it’s suggested that there may be an
accomplice here in the house.”
“Did Lord Crowley tell you
so?”
“Crowley and the champagne
between them. In confidence, of course, just as your girl told you; but
even in
confidence he never let on about Mackenzie. He told me there was a
detective in
the background, but that was all. Putting him up as a guest is
evidently their
big secret, to be kept from the other guests because it might offend
them, but
more particularly from the servants whom he’s here to watch. That’s my
reading
of the situation, Bunny, and you will agree with me that it’s
infinitely more
interesting than we could have imagined it would prove.”
“But infinitely more
difficult for us,” said I, with a sigh of pusillanimous relief. “Our
hands are
tied for this week, at all events.”
“Not necessarily, my dear
Bunny, though I admit that the chances are against us. Yet I’m not so
sure of
that either. There are all sorts of possibilities in these
three-cornered combinations.
Set A to watch B, and he won’t have an eye left for C. That’s the
obvious
theory, but then Mackenzie’s a very big A. I should be sorry to have
any boodle
about me with that man in the house. Yet it would be great to nip in
between A
and B and score off them both at once! It would be worth a risk, Bunny,
to do
that; it would be worth risking something merely to take on old hands
like B
and his men at their own old game! Eh, Bunny? That would be something
like a
match. Gentlemen and Players at single wicket, by Jove!”
His eyes were brighter
than
I had known them for many a day. They shone with the perverted
enthusiasm which
was roused in him only by the contemplation of some new audacity. He
kicked off
his shoes and began pacing his room with noiseless rapidity; not since
the
night of the Old Bohemian dinner to Reuben Rosenthall had Raffles
exhibited
such excitement in my presence; and I was not sorry at the moment to
be
reminded of the fiasco to which that banquet had been the prelude.
“My dear A. J.,” said I in
his very own tone, “you’re far too fond of the uphill game; you will
eventually
fall a victim to the sporting spirit and nothing else. Take a lesson
from our
last escape, and fly lower as you value our skins. Study the house as
much as
you like, but do — not — go and shove your head into Mackenzie’s mouth!”
My wealth of metaphor
brought him to a standstill, with his cigarette between his fingers and
a grin
beneath his shining eyes.
“You’re quite right,
Bunny.
I won’t. I really won’t. Yet — you saw old Lady Melrose’s necklace?
I’ve been
wanting it for years! But I’m not going to play the fool; honour
bright, I’m
not; yet — by Jove! — to get to windward of the professors and
Mackenzie too!
It would be a great game, Bunny, it would be a great game!”
“Well, you mustn’t play it
this week.”
“No, no, I won’t. But I
wonder how the professors think of going to work? That’s what one wants
to
know. I wonder if they’ve really got an accomplice in the house? How I
wish I
knew their game! But it’s all right, Bunny; don’t you be jealous; it
shall be as
you wish.”
And with that assurance I
went off to my own room, and so to bed with an incredibly light
heart.
I had still enough of the honest man in me to welcome the postponement
of our
actual felonies, to dread their performance, to deplore their
necessity: which
is merely another way of stating the too patent fact that I was an
incomparably
weaker man than Raffles, while every whit as wicked. I had, however,
one rather
strong point. I possessed the gift of dismissing unpleasant
considerations, not
intimately connected with the passing moment, entirely from my mind.
Through
the exercise of this faculty I had lately been living my frivolous life
in town
with as much ignoble enjoyment as I had derived from it the year
before; and
similarly, here at Milchester, in the long-dreaded cricket week, I had
after
all a quite excellent time.
It is true that there were
other factors in this pleasing disappointment. In the first place, mirabile
dictu, there were one or two even greater duffers than I on the
Abbey cricket
field. Indeed, quite early in the week, when it was of most value to
me. I gained
considerable kudos for a lucky catch; a ball, of which I had merely
heard the
hum, stuck fast in my hand, which Lord Amersteth himself grasped in
public congratulation.
This happy accident was not to be undone even by me, and, as nothing
succeeds
like success, and the constant encouragement of the one great
cricketer on the
field was in itself an immense stimulus, I actually made a run or two
in my
very next innings. Miss Melhuish said pretty things to me that night at
the
great ball in honour of Viscount Crowley’s majority; she also told me
that was
the night on which the robbers would assuredly make their raid, and was
full of
arch tremors when we sat out in the garden, though the entire premises
were
illuminated all night long. Meanwhile the quiet Scotchman took
countless
photographs by day, which he developed by night in a dark room
admirably
situated in the servants’ part of the house; and it is my firm belief
that only
two of his fellow-guests knew Mr. Clephane of Dundee for Inspector
Mackenzie of
Scotland Yard.
The week was to end with a
trumpery match on the Saturday, which two or three of us intended
abandoning
early in order to return to town that night. The match, however, was
never
played. In the small hours of the Saturday morning a tragedy took place
at Milchester
Abbey.
Let me tell of the thing
as
I saw and heard it. My room opened upon the central gallery, and was
not even
on the same floor as that on which Raffles — and I think all the other
men — were
quartered. I had been put, in fact, into the dressing-room of one of
the grand
suites, and my too near neighbours were old Lady Melrose and my host
and
hostess. Now, by the Friday evening the actual festivities were at an
end,
and, for the first time that week, I must have been sound asleep since
midnight, when all at once I found myself sitting up breathless. A
heavy thud
had come against my door, and now I heard hard breathing and the dull
stamp of
muffled feet.
“I’ve got ye,” muttered a
voice. “It’s no use struggling.”
It was the Scotch
detective,
and a new fear turned me cold. There was no reply, but the hard
breathing grew
harder still, and the muffled feet beat the floor to a quicker measure.
In sudden
panic I sprang out of bed and flung open my door. A light burnt low on
the
landing, and by it I could see Mackenzie swaying and staggering in a
silent
tussle with some powerful adversary.
“Hold this man!” he cried,
as I appeared. “Hold the rascal!”
But I stood like a fool
until the pair of them backed into me, when, with a deep breath I flung
myself
on the fellow, whose face I had seen at last. He was one of the footmen
who
waited at table; and no sooner had I pinned him than the detective
loosed his hold.
“Hang on to him,” he
cried. “There’s
more of ‘em below.”
And he went leaping down
the
stairs, as other doors opened and Lord Amersteth and his son appeared
simultaneously in their pyjamas. At that my man ceased struggling; but
I was
still holding him when Crowley turned up the gas.
“What the devil’s all
this?”
asked Lord Amersteth, blinking. “Who was that ran downstairs?”
“Mac — Clephane!” said I
hastily.
“Aha!” said he, turning to
the footman. “So you’re the scoundrel, are you? Well done! Well done!
Where was
he caught?” I had no idea.
“Here’s Lady Melrose’s
door
open,” said Crowley. “Lady Melrose! Lady Melrose!”
“You forget she’s deaf,”
said Lord Amersteth. “Ah!
that’ll be her maid.”
An inner door had opened;
next instant there was a little shriek, and a white figure gesticulated
on the
threshold.
“Où donc
est I’écrin
de
Madame la Marquise? La fenêtre
est ouverte. Il a disparu!”
“Window open and
jewel-case
gone, by Jove!” exclaimed Lord Amersteth. “Mais comment est Madame
la Marquise? Estelle
bien?”
“Oui, milor. Elle
dort.”
“Sleeps through it all,”
said my lord. “She’s the only one, then!”
“What made Mackenzie —
Clephane — bolt?” young Crowley asked me.
“Said there were more of
them below.”
“Why the devil couldn’t
you
tell us so before?” he cried, and went leaping downstairs in his turn.
He was followed by nearly
all the cricketers, who now burst upon the scene in a body, only to
desert it
for the chase. Raffles was one of them, and I would gladly have been
another,
had not the footman chosen this moment to hurl me from him, and to make
a dash
in the direction from which they had come. Lord Amersteth had him in an
instant; but the fellow fought desperately, and it took the two of us
to drag
him downstairs, amid a terrified chorus from half-open doors.
Eventually we
handed, him over to two other footmen who appeared with their
nightshirts
tucked into their trousers, and my host was good enough to compliment
me as he
led the way outside.
“I thought I heard a
shot,”
he added “Didn’t you?”
“I thought I heard three.”
And out we dashed into the
darkness.
I remember how the gravel
pricked my feet, how the wet grass numbed them as we made for the sound
of
voices on an outlying lawn. So dark was the night that we were in the
cricketers’
midst before we saw the shimmer of their pyjamas; and then Lord
Amersteth almost
trod on Mackenzie as he lay prostrate in the dew.
“Who’s this?” he cried.
“What
on earth’s happened?”
“It’s Clephane,” said a
man who
knelt over him. “He’s got a bullet in him somewhere.”
“Is he alive?”
“Barely.”
“Good God! Where’s
Crowley?”
“Here I am,” called a
breathless voice. “It’s no good, you fellows. There’s nothing to show
which way
they’ve gone. Here’s Raffles; he’s chucked it, too.” And they ran up
panting.
“Well, we’ve got one of
them,
at all events,” muttered Lord Amersteth. “The next thing is to get this
poor
fellow indoors. Take his shoulders, somebody. Now his middle. Join
hands under
him. All together, now; that’s the way. Poor fellow! Poor fellow! His
name
isn’t Clephane at all. He’s a Scotland Yard detective, down here for
these very
villains!”
Raffles was the first to
express surprise; but he had also been the first to raise the wounded
man. Nor
had any of them a stronger or more tender hand in the slow procession
to the
house. In a little we had the senseless man stretched on a sofa in the
library.
And there, with ice on his wound and brandy in his throat, his eyes
opened and
his lips moved.
Lord Amersteth bent down
to
catch the words.
“Yes, yes,” said he;
“we’ve
got one of them safe and sound. The brute you collared upstairs.” Lord
Amersteth
bent lower. “By Jove! Lowered the jewel-case out of the window, did he?
And
they’ve got clean away with it! Well, well! I only hope we’ll be able
to pull
this good fellow through. He’s off again.”
An hour passed: the sun
was
rising.
It found a dozen young
fellows on the settees in the billiard-room, drinking whisky and
soda-water in
their overcoats and pyjamas, and still talking excitedly in one breath.
A time-table
was being passed from hand to hand: the doctor was still in the
library. At
last the door opened, and Lord Amersteth put in his head.
“It isn’t hopeless,” said
he, “but it’s bad enough. There’ll be no cricket to-day.” Another hour,
and
most of us were on our way to catch the early train; between us we
filled a
compartment almost to suffocation. And still we talked all together of
the
night’s event; and still I was a little hero in my way, for having kept
my hold
of the one ruffian who had been taken; and my gratification was subtle
and
intense. Raffles watched me under lowered lids. Not a word had we had
together;
not a word did we have until we had left the others at Paddington, and
were
skimming through the streets in a hansom with noiseless tyres and a
tinkling
bell.
“Well, Bunny,” said
Raffles,
“so the professors have it, eh?”
“Yes,” said I. “And I’m
jolly glad!”
“That poor Mackenzie has a
ball in his chest?”
“That you and I have been
on
the decent side for once.”
He shrugged his shoulders.
“You’re hopeless, Bunny,
quite hopeless! I take it you wouldn’t have refused your share if the
boodle
had fallen to us? Yet you positively enjoy coming off second best — for
the
second time running! I confess, however, that the professors’ methods
were full
of interest to me. I, for one, have probably gained as much in
experience as I
have lost in other things. That lowering the jewel-case out of the
window was a
very simple and effective expedient; two of them had been waiting below
for it
for hours.”
“How do you know?” I asked.
I saw them from my own window.
“I saw them from my own
window, which was just above the dear old lady’s. I was fretting for
that
necklace in particular, when I went up to turn in for our last night —
and I
happened to look out of my window. In point of fact, I wanted to see
whether
the one below was open, and whether there was the slightest chance of
working
the oracle with my sheet for a rope. Of course I took the precaution of
turning
my light off first, and it was a lucky thing I did. I saw the pros.
right down
below, and they never saw me. I saw a little tiny luminous disc just
for an
instant, and then again for an instant a few minutes later. Of course I
knew
what it was, for I have my own watch-dial daubed with luminous paint;
it makes
a lantern of sorts when you can get no better. But these fellows were
not using
theirs as a lantern. They were under the old lady’s window. They were
watching
the time. The whole thing was arranged with their accomplice inside.
Set a
thief to catch a thief: in a minute I had guessed what the whole thing
proved to
be.”
“And you did nothing!” I
exclaimed.
“On the contrary, I went
downstairs and straight into Lady Melrose’s room —”
“You did?”
“Without a moment’s
hesitation. To save her jewels. And I was prepared to yell as much into
her ear-trumpet
for all the house to hear. But the dear lady is too deaf and too fond
of her
dinner to wake easily.”
“Well?”
“She didn’t stir.”
“And yet you allowed the
professors, as you call them, to take her jewels, case and all!”
“All but this,” said
Raffles,
thrusting his fist into my lap. “I would have shown it you before, but
really,
old fellow, your face all day has been worth a fortune to the firm!”
And he opened his fist, to
shut it next instant on the bunch of diamonds and of sapphires that I
had
last seen encircling the neck of Lady Melrose.
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