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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“Why did you do that?” the adventurer asked, with a jerk of his head
toward the hall.
“Tell Sidonie to wait instead of calling for help? Because—well,
because you interest me strangely. I’ve got a theory you’re in a
desperate quandary and are about to throw yourself on my mercy.”
“You are right,” Lanyard admitted tersely.
“Ah! Now you do begin to grow interesting! Would you mind explaining
why you think I’ll be merciful?”
“Because, madame, I’ve done you a great service, and feel I can count
upon your gratitude.”
The Frenchwoman’s eyebrows lifted at this. “Doubtless, monsieur knows
what he’s talking about–-”
“Listen, madame: I am in love with a young woman, an American, a
stranger and friendless in Paris. If anything happens to me
tonight, if I am arrested or assassinated–-”
“Is that likely?”
“Quite likely, madame: I have enemies among the Apaches, and in my own
profession as well; and I have reason to believe that several of them
are in this neighbourhood tonight. I may possibly not escape their
attentions. In that event, this young lady of whom I speak will need
a protector.”
“And why must I interest myself in her fate, pray?”
“Because, madame, of this service I have done you … Recently, in
London, you were robbed–-”
The woman started and coloured with excitement: “You know something of
my jewels?”
“Everything, madame: it was I who stole them.”
“You? You are, then, that Lone Wolf?”
“I was, madame.”
“Why the past tense?” the woman demanded, eyeing him with a portentous
frown.
“Because I am done with thieving.”
She threw back her head and laughed, but without mirth: “A likely story,
monsieur! Have you reformed since I caught you here–-?”
“Does it matter when? I take it that proof, visible, tangible proof of
my sincerity, more than a meaningless date, would be needed to convince
you.”
“No doubt of that, Monsieur the Lone Wolf!”
“Could you ask better proof than the restoration of your stolen
property?”
“Are you trying to bribe me to let you off with an offer to return my
jewels?”
“I’m afraid emergency reformation wouldn’t persuade you–-”
“You may well be afraid, monsieur!”
“But if I can prove I’ve already restored your jewels–-?”
“But you have not.”
“If madame will do me the favour to open her safe, she will find them
there—conspicuously placed.”
“What nonsense–-!”
“Am I wrong in assuming that madame didn’t return from England until
quite recently?”
“But today, in fact–-”
“And you haven’t troubled to investigate your safe since returning?”
“It had not occurred to me–-”
“Then why not test my statement before denying it?”
With an incredulous shrug Madame Omber terminated a puzzled scrutiny
of Lanyard’s countenance, and turned to the safe.
“But to have done what you declare you have,” she argued, “you must
have known the combination—since it appears you haven’t broken this
open.”
The combination ran glibly off Lanyard’s tongue. And at this, with
every evidence of excitement, at length beginning to hope if not to
believe, the woman set herself to open the safe. Within a minute she
had succeeded, the morocco-bound jewel-case was in her hand, and a
hasty examination had assured her its treasure was intact.
“But why–-?” she stammered, pale with emotion—“why, monsieur, why?”
“Because I decided to leave off stealing for a livelihood.”
“When did you bring these jewels here?”
“Within the week—four or five nights since–-”
“And then—repented, eh?”
“I own it.”
“But came here again tonight, to steal a second time what you had
stolen once?”
“That’s true, too.”
“And I interrupted you–-”
“Pardon, madame: not you, but my better self. I came to steal—I could
not.”
“Monsieur—you do not convince. I fail to fathom your motives, but–-”
A sudden shock of heavy trampling feet in the reception-hall,
accompanied by a clash of excited voices, silenced her and brought
Lanyard instantly to the face-about.
Above that loud wrangle—of which neither had received the least
warning, so completely had their argument absorbed them—Sidonie’s
accents were audible:
“Madame—madame!”—a cry of protest.
“What is it?” madame demanded of Lanyard.
He threw her the word “Police!” as he turned and flung himself into the
recess of the window.
But when he wrenched it open the voice of a picket on the lawn saluted
him in sharp warning; and when, involuntarily, he stepped out upon the
balcony, a flash of flame split the gloom below, a loud report rang in
the quiet of the park, and a bullet slapped viciously the stone facing
of the window.
XXIV RENDEZVOUSWith as little ceremony as though the bullet had lodged in himself,
Lanyard tumbled back into the room, tripped, and fell sprawling; while
to a tune of clattering boots two sergents de ville lumbered valiantly
into the library and pulled up to discover Madame Omber standing
calmly, safe and sound, beside her desk, and Lanyard picking himself
up from the floor by the open window.
Behind them Sidonie trotted, wringing her hands.
“Madame!” she bleated—“they wouldn’t listen to me, madame—I couldn’t
stop them!”
“All right, Sidonie. Go back to the hall. I’ll call you when needed….
Messieurs, good morning!”
One of the sergents advanced with an uncertain salute and a superfluous
question: “Madame Omber–-?” The other waited on the threshold,
barring the way.
Lanyard measured the two speculatively: the spokesman seemed a bit old
and fat, ripe for his pension, little apt to prove seriously effective
in a rough-and-tumble; but the other was young, sturdy, and
broad-chested, with the poise of an athlete, and carried in addition to
his sword a pistol naked in his hand, while his clear blue eyes, meeting
the adventurer’s, lighted up with a glint of invitation.
For the present, however, Lanyard wasn’t taking any. He met that
challenge with a look of utter stupidity, folded his arms, lounged
against the desk, and watched Madame Omber acknowledge, none too
cordially, the other sergent’s query.
“I am Madame Omber—yes. What can I do for you?”
The sergent gaped. “Pardon!” he stammered, then laughed as one who
tardily appreciates a joke. “It is well we are arrived in time,
madame,” he added—“though it would seem you have not had great trouble
with this miscreant. Where is the woman?”
He moved a pace toward Lanyard: handcuffs jingled in his grasp.
“But a moment!” madame interposed. “Woman? What woman?”
Pausing, the older sergent explained in a tone of surprise:
“But his accomplice, naturally! Such were our instructions—to proceed
at once to madame’s h�tel, come in quietly by the servants’ entrance—
which would be open—and arrest a burglar with his female accomplice.”
Again the stout sergent moved toward Lanyard; again Madame Omber
stopped him.
“But one moment more, if you please!”
Her eyes, dense with suspicion, questioned Lanyard; who, with a
significant nod toward the jewel-case still in her hands, gave her a
glance of dumb entreaty.
After brief hesitation, “It is a mistake,” madame declared; “there is
no woman in this house, to my certain knowledge, who has no right to be
here… But you say you received a message? I sent none!”
The fat sergent shrugged. “That is not for me to dispute, madame. I
have only my orders to go by.”
He glared sullenly at Lanyard; who returned a placid smile that
(despite such hope as he might derive from madame’s irresolute manner)
masked a vast amount of trepidation. He felt tolerably sure Madame
Omber had not sent for police on prior knowledge of his presence in
the library. All this, then, would seem to indicate a new form of
attack on the part of the Pack. He had probably been followed and seen
to enter; or else the girl had been caught attempting to steal away and
the information wrung from her by force majeure…. Moreover, he
could hear two more pair of feet tramping through the salons.
Pending the arrival of these last, Madame Omber said nothing more.
And, unceremoniously enough, the newcomers shouldered into the
library—one pompous uniformed body, of otherwise undistinguished
appearance, promptly identified by the sergents de ville as monsieur
le commissaire of that quarter; the other, a puffy mediocrity, known
to Lanyard at least (if apparently to no one else) as Popinot.
At this confirmation of his darkest fears, the adventurer abandoned
hope of aid from Madame Omber and began quietly to reckon his chances
of escape through his own efforts.
But he was quite unarmed, and the odds were heavy: four against one,
all four no doubt under arms, and two at least—the sergents—men of
sound military training.
“Madame Omber?” enquired the commissaire, saluting that lady with
immense dignity. “One trusts that this intrusion may be pardoned, the
circumstances remembered. In an affair of this nature, involving this
repository of so historic treasures—”
“That is quite well understood, monsieur le commissaire,” madame
replied distantly. “And this monsieur is, no doubt, your aide?”
“Pardon!” the official hastened to identify his companion: “Monsieur
Popinot, agent de la S�ret�, who lays these informations!”
With a profound obeisance to Madame Omber, Popinot strode dramatically
over to confront Lanyard and explore his features with his small, keen,
shifty eyes of a pig; a scrutiny which the adventurer suffered with
superficial calm.
“It is he!” Popinot announced with a gesture. “Messieurs, I call upon
you to arrest this man, Michael Lanyard, alias ‘The Lone Wolf.’”
He stepped back a pace, expanding his chest in vain effort to eclipse
his abdomen, and glanced triumphantly at his respectful audience.
“Accused,” he added with intense relish, “of the murder of Inspector
Roddy of Scotland Yard at Troyon’s, as well as of setting fire to that
establishment—”
“For this, Popinot,” Lanyard interrupted in an undertone, “I shall some
day cut off your ears!” He turned to Madame Omber: “Accept, if you
please, madame, my sincere regrets … but this charge happens to be
one of which I am altogether innocent.”
Instantly, from lounging against the desk, Lanyard straightened up: and
the heavy humidor of brass and mahogany, on which his right hand had
been resting, seemed fairly to leap from its place as, with a sweep of
his arm, he sent it spinning point-blank at the younger sergent.
Before that one, wholly unprepared, could more than gasp, the humidor
caught him a blow like a kick just below the breastbone. He reeled, the
breath left him in one great gust, he sat down abruptly—blue eyes wide
with a look of aggrieved surprise—clapped both hands to his middle,
blinked, turned pale, and keeled over on his side.
But Lanyard hadn’t waited to note results. He was busy. The fat sergent
had leaped snarling upon his arm, and was struggling to hold it still
long enough to snap a handcuff round the wrist; while the commissaire
had started forward with a bellow of rage and two hands extended and
itching for the adventurer’s throat.
The first received a half-arm jab on the point of his chin that jarred
his entire system, and without in the least understanding how it
happened, found himself whirled around and laid prostrate in the
commissaire’s path. The latter tripped, fell, and planted two hard
knees, with the bulk of his weight atop them, on the apex of the
sergent’s paunch.
At the same time Lanyard, leaping toward the doorway, noticed Popinot
tugging at something in his hip-pocket.
Followed a vivid flash, then complete darkness: with a well-aimed
kick—an elementary movement of la savate—Lanyard had dislocated the
switch of
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