The Black Mask by E. W. Hornung (read after .TXT) ๐
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After the events of The Amateur Cracksman A. J. Raffles is missing, presumed dead, and โBunnyโ Manders is destitute but free after a stretch in prison for his crimes. So when a mysterious telegraph arrives suggesting the possibility of a lucrative position, Bunny has little option but to attend the given address.
Raffles was a commercial success for E. W. Hornung, garnering critical praise but also warnings about the glorification of crime. The Black Mask, published two years after his first collection of Raffles stories, takes a markedly more downcast tone, with the high-life escapades of the earlier stories curtailed by Rafflesโ purported death.
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- Author: E. W. Hornung
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โItโs the most sporting chase I was ever in,โ said he.
โAll my fault!โ
โMy dear Bunny, I wouldnโt have missed it for the world!โ
Nor would he forge ahead of me, though he could have done so in a moment, he who from his boyhood had done everything of the kind so much better than anybody else. No, he must ride a wheelโs length behind me, and now we could not only hear the boys running, but breathing also. And then of a sudden I saw Raffles on my right striking with his torch; a face flew out of the darkness to meet the thick glass bulb with the glowing wire enclosed; it was the face of the boy Olphert, with his enviable moustache, but it vanished with the crash of glass, and the naked wire thickened to the eye like a tuning-fork struck red-hot.
I saw no more of that. One of them had crept up on my side also; as I looked, hearing him pant, he was grabbing at my left handle, and I nearly sent Raffles into the hedge by the sharp turn I took to the right. His wheelโs length saved him. But my boy could run, was overhauling me again, seemed certain of me this time, when all at once the Sunbeam ran easily; every ounce of my weight with either foot once more, and I was over the crest of the hill, the gray road reeling out from under me as I felt for my brake. I looked back at Raffles. He had put up his feet. I screwed my head round still further, and there were the boys in their pyjamas, their hands upon their knees, like so many wicket-keepers, and a big man shaking his fist. There was a lamppost on the hilltop, and that was the last I saw.
We sailed down to the river, then on through Thames Ditton as far as Esher Station, when we turned sharp to the right, and from the dark stretch by Imber Court came to light in Molesey, and were soon pedalling like gentlemen of leisure through Bushey Park, our lights turned up, the broken torch put out and away. The big gates had long been shut, but you can manoeuvre a bicycle through the others. We had no further adventures on the way home, and our coffee was still warm upon the hob.
โBut I think itโs an occasion for Sullivans,โ said Raffles, who now kept them for such. โBy all my gods, Bunny, itโs been the most sporting night we ever had in our lives! And do you know which was the most sporting part of it?โ
โThat uphill ride?โ
โI wasnโt thinking of it.โ
โTurning your torch into a truncheon?โ
โMy dear Bunny! A gallant ladโ โI hated hitting him.โ
โI know,โ I said. โThe way you got us out of the house!โ
โNo, Bunny,โ said Raffles, blowing rings. โIt came before that, you sinner, and you know it!โ
โYou donโt mean anything I did?โ said I, self-consciously, for I began to see that this was what he did mean. And now at latest it will also be seen why this story has been told with undue and inexcusable gusto; there is none other like it for me to tell; it is my one ewe-lamb in all these annals. But Raffles had a ruder name for it.
โIt was the Apotheosis of the Bunny,โ said he, but in a tone I never shall forget.
โI hardly knew what I was doing or saying,โ I said. โThe whole thing was a fluke.โ
โThen,โ said Raffles, โit was the kind of fluke I always trusted you to make when runs were wanted.โ
And he held out his dear old hand.
The Knees of the Gods IโThe worst of this war,โ said Raffles, โis the way it puts a fellow off his work.โ
It was, of course, the winter before last, and we had done nothing dreadful since the early autumn. Undoubtedly the war was the cause. Not that we were among the earlier victims of the fever. I took disgracefully little interest in the Negotiations, while the Ultimatum appealed to Raffles as a sporting flutter. Then we gave the whole thing till Christmas. We still missed the cricket in the papers. But one russet afternoon we were in Richmond, and a terrible type was shouting himself hoarse with โโโEavy British lorssesโ โorful slorter oโ the Boโwers! Orful slorter! Orful slorter! โEavy British lorsses!โ I thought the terrible type had invented it, but Raffles gave him more than he asked, and then I held the bicycle while he tried to pronounce Elandโs Laagte. We were never again without our sheaf of evening papers, and Raffles ordered three morning ones, and I gave up mine in spite of its literary page. We became strategists. We knew exactly what Buller was to do on landing, and, still better, what the other Generals should have done. Our map was the best that could be bought, with flags that deserved a better fate than standing still. Raffles woke me to hear โThe Absentminded Beggarโ on the morning it appeared; he was one of the first substantial subscribers to the fund. By this time our dear landlady was more excited than we. To our enthusiasm for Thomas she added a personal bitterness against the Wild Boars, as she persisted in calling them, each time as though it were the first. I could linger over our landladyโs attitude in the whole matter. That was her only joke about it, and the true humorist never smiled at it herself. But you had only to say a syllable for a venerable gentleman, declared by her to be at the bottom of it all, to hear what she could do to him if she caught him.
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