The Lone Wolf by Louis Joseph Vance (good ebook reader .txt) đź“•
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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crime by his conscience—or whatever it was, what for want of a better
name he must call his conscience: this thing within him that revolted
from his purpose, mutinied against the dictates of his Self, and
stopped his hand from reaping the harvest of his cunning and daring;
this sense of honour and of honesty that in a few brief days had grown
more dear to him than all else in life, knitting itself inextricably
into the fibre of his being, so that to deny it were against Nature….
He closed his eyes to shut out the accusing vision, and knelt on,
unstirring, though torn this way and that in the conflict of man’s dual
nature.
Minutes passed without his knowledge.
But in time he grew more calm; his hands relaxed, the muscles of his
brow smoothed out, he breathed more slowly and deeply; his set lips
parted and a profound sigh whispered in the stillness. A great
weariness upon him, he rose slowly and heavily from the floor, and
stood erect, free at last and forever from that ancient evil which so
long had held his soul in bondage.
And in that moment of victory, through the deep hush reigning in the
house, he detected an incautious footfall on the parquetry of the
reception-hall.
XXII TRAPPEDIt was a sound so slight, so very small and still, that only a
super-subtle sense of hearing could have discriminated it from the
confused multiplicity of almost inaudible, interwoven, interdependent
sounds that make up the slumberous quiet of every human habitation, by
night.
Lanyard, whose training had taught him how to listen, had learned that
the nocturnal hush of each and every house has its singular cadence,
its own gentle movement of muted but harmonious sound in which the
introduction of an alien sound produces immediate discord, and to which,
while at his work, he need attend only subconsciously since the least
variation from the norm would give him warning.
Now, in the silence of this old mansion, he detected a faint flutter of
discordance that sounded a note of stealth; such a note as no move of
his since entering had evoked.
He was no longer alone, but shared the empty magnificence of those vast
salons with one whose purpose was as furtive, as secret, as wary as his
own; no servant or watchman roused by an intuition of evil, but one who
had no more than he any lawful business there.
And while he stood at alert attention the sound was repeated from a
point less distant, indicating that the second intruder was moving
toward the library.
In two swift strides Lanyard left the shelter of the screen and took to
cover in the recess of one of the tall windows, behind its heavy velvet
hangings: an action that could have been timed no more precisely had it
been rehearsed; he was barely in hiding when a shape of shadow slipped
into the library, paused beside the massive desk, and raked the room
with the light of a powerful flash-lamp.
Its initial glare struck squarely into Lanyard’s eyes, dazzling them,
as he peered through a narrow opening in the porti�res; and though the
light was instantly shifted, for several moments a blur of peacock
colour, blending, ebbing, hung like a curtain in the darkness, and he
could see nothing distinctly—only the trail traced by that dancing
spot-light over walls and furnishings.
When at length his vision cleared, the newcomer was kneeling in turn
before the safe; but more light was needed, and this one, lacking
Lanyard’s patience and studious caution, turned back to the desk, and,
taking the reading-lamp, transferred it to the floor behind the screen.
But even before the flood of light followed the dull click of the
switch, Lanyard had recognized the woman.
For an instant he felt dazed, half-stunned, suffocating, much as he had
felt with Greggs’ fingers tightening on his windpipe, that week-old
night at Troyon’s; he experienced real difficulty about breathing, and
was conscious of a sickish throbbing in his temples and a pounding in
his bosom like the tolling of a great bell. He stared, swaying….
The light, gushing from the opaque hood, made the safe door a glare,
and was thrown back into her intent, masked face, throwing out in sharp
silhouette her lithe, sweet body, indisputably identified by the
individual poise of her head and shoulders and the gracious contours
of her tailored coat.
She was all in black, even to her hands, no trace of white or any
colour showing but the fair curve of the cheek below her mask and the
red of her lips. And if more evidence were needed, the intelligence
with which she attacked the combination, the confident, business-like
precision distinguishing her every action, proved her an apt pupil in
that business.
His thoughts were all in a welter of miserable confusion. He knew that
this explained many things he would have held questionable had not his
infatuation forbidden him to consider them at all, lest he be disloyal
to this woman whom he adored; but in the anguish of that moment he
could entertain but one thought, and that possessed him altogether—that
she must somehow be saved from the evil she contemplated….
But while he hesitated, she became sensitive to his presence; though he
had made no sound since her entrance, though he had not even stirred,
somehow she divined that he—someone—was there in the recess of the
window, watching her.
In the act of opening the safe—using the memorandum of its combination
which he had jotted down in her presence—he saw her pause, freeze to a
pose of attention, then turn to stare directly at the porti�re that hid
him. And for an eternal second she remained kneeling there, so still
that she seemed not even to breathe, her gaze fixed and level, waiting
for some sound, some sign, some tremor of the curtain’s folds, to
confirm her suspicion.
When at length she rose it was in one swift, alert movement. And as she
paused with her slight shoulders squared and her head thrown back
defiantly, challengingly, as one without will of his own but drawn
irresistibly by her gaze, he stepped out into the room.
And since he was no more the Lone Wolf, but now a simple man in agony,
with no thought for their circumstances—for the fact that they were
both housebreakers and that the slightest sound might raise a
hue-and-cry upon them—he took one faltering step toward her, stopped,
lifted a hand in a gesture of appeal, and stammered:
“Lucy—you–-”
His voice broke and failed.
She didn’t answer, more than by recoiling as though he had offered to
strike her, until the table stopped her, and she leaned back as if
glad of its support.
“Oh!” she cried, trembling—“why_—why_ did you do it?”
He might have answered her in kind, but self-justification passed his
power. He couldn’t say, “Because this evening you made me lose faith
in everything, and I thought to forget you by going to the devil the
quickest way I knew—this way!”—though that was true. He couldn’t say:
“Because, a thief from boyhood, habit proved too strong for me, and I
couldn’t withstand temptation!”—for that was untrue. He could only
hang his head and mumble the wretched confession: “I don’t know.”
As if he hadn’t spoken, she cried again: “Why—why did you do it? I
was so proud of you, so sure of you, the man who had turned straight
because of me!… It compensated… But now…!”
Her voice broke in a short, dry sob.
“Compensated?” he repeated stupidly.
“Yes, compensated!” She lifted her head with a gesture of impatience:
“For this—don’t you understand?—for this that I’m doing! You don’t
imagine I’m here of my own will?—that I went back to Bannon for any
reason but to try to save you from him? I knew something of his power,
and you didn’t; I knew if I went away with you he’d never rest until
he had you murdered. And I thought if I could mislead him by lies for
a little time—long enough to give you a chance to escape—I thought
—perhaps—I might be able to communicate with the police, denounce
him–-”
She hesitated, breathless and appealing.
At her first words he had drawn close to her; and all their talk was
murmurings. But this was quite instinctive; for both were beyond
considerations of prudence, the one coherent thought of each being
that now, once and forever, all misunderstanding must be done away
with.
Now, as naturally as though they had been lovers always, Lanyard took
her hand, and clasped it between his own.
“You cared as much as that!”
“I love you,” she told him—“I love you so much I am ready to sacrifice
everything for you—life, liberty, honour–-”
“Hush, dearest, hush!” he begged, half distracted.
“I mean it: if honour could hold me back, do you think I would have
broken in here tonight to steal for Bannon?”
“He sent you, eh?” Lanyard commented in a dangerous voice.
“He was too cunning for me… I was afraid to tell you… I meant to
tell—to warn you, this evening in the cab. But then I thought perhaps
if I said nothing and sent you away believing the worst of me—perhaps
you would save yourself and forget me–-”
“But never!”
“I tried my best to deceive him, but couldn’t. They got the truth from
me by threats–-”
“They wouldn’t dare–-”
“They dare anything, I tell you! They knew enough of what had happened,
through their spies, to go on, and they tormented and bullied me until
I broke down and told them everything… And when they learned you had
brought the jewels back here, Bannon told me I must bring them to
him—that, if I refused, he’d have you killed. I held out until
tonight; then just as I was about to go to bed he received a telephone
message, and told me you were driving a taxi and followed by Apaches
and wouldn’t live till daylight if I persisted in refusing.”
“You came alone?”
“No. Three men brought me to the gate. They’re waiting outside, in the
park.”
“Apaches?”
“Two of them. The other is Captain Ekstrom.”
“Ekstrom!” Lanyard cried in despair. “Is he–-”
The dull, heavy, crashing slam of the great front doors silenced him.
XXIII MADAME OMBERBefore the echo of that crash ceased to reverberate from room to room,
Lanyard slipped to one side of the doorway, from which point he could
command the perspective of the salons together with a partial view of
the front doors. And he was no more than there, in the shadow of the
porti�res, when light from an electrolier flooded the reception-hall.
It showed him a single figure, that of a handsome woman, considerably
beyond middle age but still a well-poised, vigorous, and commanding
presence, in full evening dress of such magnificence as to suggest
recent attendance at some State function.
Standing beneath the light, she was restoring a key to a brocaded
handbag. This done, she turned her head and spoke indistinguishably
over her shoulder. Promptly there came into view a second woman of
about the same age, but even more strong and able of appearance—a
serving-woman, in plain, dark garments, undoubtedly madame’s maid.
Handing over the brocaded bag, madame unlatched the throat of her
ermine cloak and surrendered it to the servant’s care.
Her next words were audible, and reassuring in as far as they
indicated ignorance of anything amiss.
“Thank you, Sidonie. You may go to bed now.”
“Madame will not need me
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