The Lone Wolf by Louis Joseph Vance (good ebook reader .txt) 📕
His pet superstition was that, as long as he refrained from practisinghis profession in Paris, Paris would remain his impregnable Tower ofRefuge. The world owed Bourke a living, or he so considered; and it mustbe allowed that he made collections on account with tolerable regularityand success; but Paris was tax-exempt as long as Paris offered himimmunity from molestation.
Not only did Paris suit his tastes excellently, but there was no place,in Bourke's esteem, comparable with Troyon's for peace and quiet.Hence, the continuity of his patronage was never broken by trials ofrival hostelries; and Troyon's was always expecting Bourke for thesimple reason that he invariably arrived unexpectedly, with neitherwarning nor ostentation, to stop as long as he liked, whether a day ora week or a month, and depart in the same manner.
His daily routine, as Troyon's came to know it, varied but slightly: hebreakf
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with a brave and generous gesture she offered him her hand.
“Mr. Lanyard, I promise….”
To every woman, even the least lovely, her hour of beauty: it had not
entered Lanyard’s mind to think this woman beautiful until that moment.
Of her exotic charm, of the allure of her pensive, plaintive prettiness,
he had been well aware; even as he had been unable to deny to himself
that he was all for her, that he loved her with all the strength that
was his; but not till now had he understood that she was the one woman
whose loveliness to him would darken the fairness of all others.
And for a little, holding her tremulous hand upon his finger-tips as
though he feared to bruise it with a ruder contact, he could not take
his eyes from her.
Then reverently he bowed his head and touched his lips to that hand …
and felt it snatched swiftly away, and started back, aghast, the idyll
roughly dissipated, the castle of his dreams falling in thunders round
his ears.
In the studio-skylight overhead a pane of glass had fallen in with a
shattering crash as ominous as the Trump of Doom.
XIV RIVE DROITFalling without presage upon the slumberous hush enveloping the little
house marooned in that dead back-water of Paris, the shock of that
alarm drove the girl back from the table to the nearest wall, and for a
moment held her there, transfixed in panic.
To the wide, staring eyes that questioned his so urgently, Lanyard
promptly nodded grave reassurance. He hadn’t stirred since his first,
involuntary and almost imperceptible start, and before the last
fragment of splintered glass had tinkled on the floor above, he was
calming her in the most matter-of-fact manner.
“Don’t be alarmed,” he said. “It’s nothing—merely Solon’s skylight
gone smash!”
“You call that nothing!” she cried gustily. “What caused it, then?”
“My negligence,” he admitted gloomily. “I might have known that wide
spread of glass with the studio electrics on, full-blaze, would give
the show away completely. The house is known to be unoccupied; and it
wasn’t to be expected that both the police and Popinot’s crew would
overlook so shining a mark…. And it’s all my fault, my oversight: I
should have thought of it before…. High time I was quitting a game
I’ve no longer the wit to play by the rules!”
“But the police would never…!”
“Certainly not. This is Popinot’s gentle method of letting us know he’s
on the job. But I’ll just have a look, to make sure…. No: stop where
you are, please. I’d rather go alone.”
He swung alertly through to the hall window, pausing there only long
enough for an instantaneous glance through the draperies—a fugitive
survey that discovered the impasse Stanislas no more abandoned to the
wind and rain, but tenanted visibly by one at least who lounged beneath
the lonely lamp-post, a shoulder against it: a featureless civilian
silhouette with attention fixed to the little house.
But Lanyard didn’t doubt this one had a dozen fellows stationed within
call….
Springing up the stairs, he paused prudently at the top-most step, one
quick glance showing him the huge rent gaping black in the skylight,
the second the missile of destruction lying amid a litter of broken
glass—a brick wrapped in newspaper, by the look of it.
Swooping forward, he retrieved this, darted back from the exposed space
beneath the shattered skylight, and had no more than cleared the
threshold than a second something fell through the gap and buried
itself in the parquetry. This was a bullet fired from the roof of one
of the adjoining buildings: confirming his prior reasoning that the
first missile must have fallen from a height, rather than have been
thrown up from the street, to have wrought such destruction with those
tough, thick panes of clouded glass….
Swearing softly to himself, he descended to the kitchen.
“As I thought,” he said coolly, exhibiting his find.
“They’re on the roof of the next house—though they’ve posted a sentry
in the street, of course.”
“But that second thump—?” the girl demanded.
“A bullet,” he said, placing the bundle on the table and cutting the
string that bound it: “they were on the quivive and fired when I showed
myself beneath the skylight.”
“But I heard no report,” she objected.
“A Maxim silencer on the gun, I fancy,” he explained, unwrapping the
brick and smoothing out the newspaper…. “Glad you thought to put on
your hat before you came down,” he added, with an approving glance for
the girl; “it won’t be safe to go up to the studio again—of course.”
His nonchalance was far less real than it seemed, but helped to steady
one who was holding herself together with a struggle, on the verge of
nervous collapse.
“But what are we to do now?” she stammered. “If they’ve surrounded the
house—!”
“Don’t worry: there’s more than one way out,” he responded, frowning at
the newspaper; “I wouldn’t have picked this place out, otherwise. Nor
would Solon have rented it in the first instance had it lacked an
emergency exit, in event of creditors…. Ah—thought so!”
“What—?”
“Troyon’s is gone,” he said, without looking up. “This is tonight’s
Presse…. ‘_Totally destroyed by a fire which started at six-thirty
this morning and in less than half an hour had reduced the ancient
structure to a heap of smoking ashes_’! …” He ran his eye quickly
down the column, selecting salient phrases: “‘_Believed to have been of
incendiary origin though the premises were uninsured_’—that’s an
intelligent guess!… ‘_Narrow escape of guests in their
‘_whatyemaycallems…._’Three lives believed to have been lost … one
body recovered charred almost beyond recognition_’—but later
identified as Roddy—poor devil! … ‘_Two guests missing, Monsieur
Lanyard, the well-known connoisseur of art, who occupied the room
adjoining that of the unfortunate detective, and Mademoiselle Bannon,
daughter of the American millionaire, who himself escaped only by a
miracle with his secretary Monsieur Greggs, the latter being overcome
by fumes_’—what a shame!… ‘_Police and firemen searching the
ruins_’—hm-hm—’ _extraordinary interest manifested by the Pr�fecture
indicates a suspicion that the building may have been fired to conceal
some crime of a political nature_.’”
Crushing the newspaper between his hands, he tossed it into a corner.
“That’s all of importance. Thoughtful of Popinot to let me know, this
way! The Pr�fecture, of course, is humming like a wasp’s-nest with the
mystery of that telegram, signed with Roddy’s name and handed in at the
Bourse an hour or so before he was ‘burned to death.’ Too bad I didn’t
know then what I do now; if I’d even remotely suspected Greggs’
association with the Pack was via Bannon…. But what’s the use? I did
my possible, knowing the odds were heavy against success.”
“What was written on the paper?” the girl demanded obliquely.
He made his eyes blank: “Written on the paper—?”
“I saw something in red ink at the head of the column. You tried to
hide it from me, but I saw…. What was it?”
“Oh—that!” he laughed contemptuously: “just Popinot’s impudence—an
invitation to come out and be a good target.”
She shook her head impatiently: “You’re not telling me the truth. It
was something else, or you wouldn’t have been so anxious to hide it.”
“Oh, but I assure you—!”
“You can’t. Be honest with me, Mr. Lanyard. It was an offer to let you
off if you’d give me up to Bannon—wasn’t it?”
“Something like that,” he assented sheepishly—“too absurd for
consideration…. But now we’re due to clear out of this before they
find a way in. Not that they’re likely to risk a raid until they’ve
tried starving us out; but it would be as well to put a good distance
between us before they find out we’ve decamped.”
He shrugged into his borrowed raincoat, buttoned it to his chin, and
turned down the brim of his felt hat; but when he looked up at the girl
again, he found she hadn’t moved; rather, she remained as one spellbound,
staring less at than through him, her expression inscrutable.
“Well,” he ventured—“if you’re quite ready, Miss Shannon—?”
“Mr. Lanyard,” she demanded almost sharply—“what was the full wording
of that message?”
“If you must know—”
“I must!”
He lifted a depreciative shoulder. “If you like, I’ll read it to
you—or, rather, translate it from the thieves’ argot Popinot
complimented me by using.”
“Not necessary,” she said tersely. “I’ll take your word for it….
But you must tell me the truth.”
“As you will…. Popinot delicately suggested that if I leave you here,
to be reunited to your alleged parent—if I’ll trust to his word of
honour, that is, and walk out of the house alone, he’ll give me
twenty-four hours in which to leave Paris.”
“Then only I stand between you and—”
“My dear young woman!” he protested hastily. “Please don’t run away
with any absurd notion like that. Do you imagine I’d consent to treat
with such canaille under any circumstances?”
“All the same,” she continued stubbornly, “I’m the stumbling-block.
You’re risking your life for me—”
“I’m not,” he insisted almost angrily.
“You are,” she returned with quiet conviction.
“Well!” he laughed—“have it your own way!…”
“But it’s my life, isn’t it? I really don’t see how you’re going to
prevent my risking it for anything that may seem to me worth the risk!”
But she wouldn’t laugh; only her countenance, suddenly bereft of its
mutinous expression, softened winningly—and her eyes grew very kind to
him.
“As long as it’s understood I understand—very well,” she said quietly;
“I’ll do as you wish, Mr. Lanyard.”
“Good!” he cried cheerfully. “I wish, by your leave, to take you out to
dinner…. This way, please!”
Leading through the scullery, he unbarred a low, arched door in one of
the walls, discovering the black mouth of a narrow and tunnel-like
passageway.
With a word of caution, flash-lamp in his left hand, pistol in right,
Lanyard stepped out into the darkness.
In two minutes he was back, with a look of relief.
“All clear,” he reported; “I felt pretty sure Popinot knew nothing of
this way out—else we’d have entertained uninvited guests long since.
Now, half a minute….”
The electric meter occupied a place on the wall of the scullery not far
from the door. Prying open its cover, he unscrewed and removed the fuse
plug, plunging the entire house in complete darkness.
“That’ll keep ‘em guessing a while!” he explained with a chuckle.
“They’ll hesitate a long time before rushing a dark house infested by a
desperate armed man—if I know anything about that mongrel lot!…
Besides, when they do get their courage up, the lack of light will
stave off discovery of this way of escape…. And now, one word more.”
A flash of the lamp located her hand. Calmly he possessed himself of it,
if without opposition.
“I’ve brought you into trouble enough, as it is, through my stupidity,”
he said; “but for that, this place should have been a refuge to us
until we were quite ready to leave Paris. So now we mustn’t forget,
before we go out to run God-only-knows-what gauntlet, to fix a
rendezvous in event of separation…. Popinot, for instance, may have
drawn a cordon around the block; we can’t tell until we’re in the
street; if he has, you must leave me to entertain them until you’re
safe beyond their reach…. Oh, don’t worry: I’m perfectly well able to
take care of myself….But afterwards, we must know where to find each
other.
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