The Clique of Gold by Emile Gaboriau (polar express read aloud .TXT) ๐
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- Author: Emile Gaboriau
Read book online ยซThe Clique of Gold by Emile Gaboriau (polar express read aloud .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Emile Gaboriau
โAh, I donโt feel so safe there,โ he replied. โThe man I had left in charge of him has foolishly lost sight of him.โ
Then noticing the trunks, he said,โ
โBut I am talking, and time flies. You are ready, I see. Let us go. I have a carriage at the door. We can talk on the way.โ
When he noticed some reluctance in Henriettaโs face, he added with a kindly smile,โ
โYou need not fear anything, Miss Henrietta; we are not going away from M. Champcey, very far from it. Here, you see, he could not have come twice without betraying the secret of your existence.โ
โBut where are we going?โ asked Mrs. Bertolle.
โTo the Hotel du Louvre, dear sister, where you will take rooms for Mrs. and Miss Bertolle. Be calm; my plans are laid.โ
Thereupon, he ran out on the staircase to call the concierge to help him in taking down the trunks.
Although the manoeuvres required by Papa Ravinetโs appearance on board โThe Saint Louisโ had taken but little time, the delay had been long enough to prevent the ship from going through all the formalities that same evening. She had, therefore, to drop anchor at some distance from the harbor, to the great disgust of the crew, who saw Marseilles all ablaze before them, and who could count the wineshops, and hear the songs of the half-drunken people as they walked down the wharves in merry bands.
The least unhappy of them all was, for once, Daniel. The terrible excitement he had undergone had given way to utter prostration. His nerves, strained to the utmost, relaxed; and he felt the delight of a man who can at last throw down a heavy burden which he has long borne on his shoulders. Papa Ravinet had given him no details; but he did not regret it, he hardly noticed it. He knew positively that his Henrietta was alive; that she was in safety; and that she still loved him. That was enough.
โWell, lieutenant,โ said Lefloch, delighted at his masterโs joy, โdid I not tell you? Good wind during the passage always brings good news upon landing.โ
That night, while โThe Saint Louisโ was rocking lazily over her anchors, was the first night, since Daniel had heard of Count Ville-Handryโs marriage, that he slept with that sweet sleep given by hope. He was only aroused by the noise of the people who came in the quarantine boat; and, when he came on deck, he found that there was nothing any longer to prevent his going on shore. The men had been actively engaged ever since early in the morning, to set things right aloft and below, so as to โdressโ โThe Saint Louis;โ for every ship, when it enters port, is decked out gayly, and carefully conceals all traces of injuries she has suffered, like the carrier-pigeon, which, upon returning to his nest after a storm, dries and smooths his feathers in the sun.
Soon the anchors were got up again; and the great clock on the wharf struck twelve, when Daniel jumped on the wharf at Marseilles, followed by his faithful man, and dazzled by the most brilliant sunlight. Ah! when he felt his foot once more standing on the soil of France, whence a vile plot had driven him long ago, his eyes flashed, and a threatening gesture boded ill to his enemies. It looked as if he were saying to them,โ
โHere I am, and my vengeance will be terrible!โ
Neither his joy nor his excitement, however, could make him forget the apprehensions of Papa Ravinet, although he thought they were eccentric, and very much exaggerated. That a spy should be waiting for him in the harbor, concealed in this busy, noisy crowd, to follow his track, and report his minutest actions,โthis seemed to him, if not impossible, at least very improbable.
Nevertheless, he determined to ascertain the fact. Instead, therefore, of simply following the wharf, of going up Canebiere Street, and turning to the right on his way to the Hotel du Luxembourg, he went through several narrow streets, turning purposely every now and then. When he reached the hotel, he was compelled to acknowledge that the old dealer had acted wisely.
A big fellow, dark complexioned, and wicked looking, had followed the same route as he, always keeping some thirty yards behind him. The man who thus watched him, with his nose in the air and his hands in his pockets, hardly suspected the danger which he ran by practising his profession within reach of Lefloch. The idea of being tracked put the worthy sailor into a red-hot fury; and he proposed nothing less than to โrun foulโ of the spy, and make an end of him for good.
โI can do it in a second,โ he assured his master. โI just go up to him, without making him aware of my presence. I seize him by his cravat; I give him two turns, like thatโand good-night. He wonโt track anybody again.โ
Daniel had to use all his authority to keep him back, and found it still harder to convince him of the necessity to let the scamp not know that he had been discovered.
โBesides,โ he added, โit is not proved yet that we are really watched; it may be merely a curious coincidence.โ
โThat may be so,โ growled Lefloch.
But they could no longer doubt, when, just before dinner, as they looked out of the window, they saw the same man pass the hotel. At night they saw him again at the depot; and he took the same express train of 9.45 for Paris, in which they went. They recognized him in the refreshment-room at Lyons. And the first person they saw as they got out at Paris was the same man.
But Daniel did not mind the spy. He had long since forgotten him. He thought of nothing but the one fact that he was in the same town now with Henrietta. Too impatient to wait for his trunks, he left Lefloch in charge, and jumped into a cab, promising the driver two dollars if he would go as fast as he could to the Hotel du Louvre. For such pay, the lean horses of any cab become equal to English thoroughbreds; and in three-quarters of an hour Daniel was installed in his room at the hotel, and waited with anxiety the return of the waiter. Now that he was really here, a thousand doubts assailed him: โHad he understood Papa Ravinet correctly? Had the good old man given him the right directions? Might they not, excited as they both were, have easily made a mistake?โ
โIn less than a quarter of an hour after your arrival,โ Papa Ravinet had said to Daniel, โyou shall have news.โ
Less than a quarter of an hour! It seemed to Daniel as if he had been an eternity in this room. Thinking that Henrietta might possibly occupy a room on the same floor with him, on the same side of the house, that he might even be separated from her only by a partition-wall, he felt like cursing Papa Ravinet, when there came a knock at the door.
โCome in!โ he cried.
A waiter appeared, and handed him a visiting-card, on which was written, โMrs. Bertolle, third story. No. 5.โ
As the waiter did not instantly
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