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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โPeter Bellingham!โ gasped Raffles under his breath, and then we saluted and tried to pass on, with the bottles ringing like church-bells under our khaki. But Captain Bellingham was a hard man.
โWhat have you men been doinโ?โ drawled he.
โNothing, sir,โ we protested, like innocence with an injury.
โLootinโ โs forbidden,โ said he. โYou had better let me see those bottles.โ
โWe are done,โ whispered Raffles, and straightway we made a sideboard of the stoop across which he had crept at so inopportune a moment. I had not the heart to raise my eyes again, yet it was many moments before the officer broke silence.
โUam Var!โ he murmured reverentially at last. โAnd Long John of Ben Nevis! The first drop thatโs been discovered in the whole psalm-singing show! What lot do you two belong to?โ
I answered.
โI must have your names.โ
In my agitation I gave my real one. Raffles had turned away, as though in heartbroken contemplation of our lost loot. I saw the officer studying his half-profile with an alarming face.
โWhatโs your name?โ he rapped out at last.
But his strange, low voice said plainly that he knew, and Raffles faced him with the monosyllable of confession and assent. I did not count the seconds until the next word, but it was Captain Bellingham who uttered it at last.
โI thought you were dead.โ
โNow you see I am not.โ
โBut you are at your old games!โ
โI am not,โ cried Raffles, and his tone was new to me. I have seldom heard one more indignant. โYes,โ he continued, โthis is loot, and the wrong โun will out. Thatโs what youโre thinking, Peterโ โI beg your pardonโ โsir. But he isnโt let out in the field! Weโre playing the game as much as you are, oldโ โsir.โ
The plural number caused the captain to toss me a contemptuous look. โIs this the fellah who was taken when you swam for it?โ he inquired, relapsing into his drawl. Raffles said I was, and with that took a passionate oath upon our absolute rectitude as volunteers. There could be no doubting him; but the officerโs eyes went back at the bottles on the stoop.
โBut look at those,โ said he; and as he looked himself the light eye melted in his fiery face. โAnd Iโve got Sparklets in my tent,โ he sighed. โYou make it in a minute!โ
Not a word from Raffles, and none, you may be sure, from me. Then suddenly Bellingham told me where his tent was, and, adding that our case was one for serious consideration, strode in its direction without another word until some sunlit paces separated us.
โYou can bring that stuff with you,โ he then flung over a shoulder-strap, โand I advise you to put it where you had it before.โ
A trooper saluted him some yards further on, and looked evilly at us as we followed with our loot. It was Corporal Connal of ours, and the thought of him takes my mind off the certainly gallant captain who only that day had joined our division with the reinforcements. I could not stand the man myself. He added soda-water to our whiskey in his tent, and would only keep a couple of bottles when we came away. Softened by the spirit, to which disuse made us all a little sensitive, our officer was soon convinced of the honest part that we were playing for once, and for fifty minutes of the hour we spent with him he and Raffles talked cricket without a break. On parting they even shook hands; that was Long John in the captainโs head; but the snob never addressed a syllable to me.
And now to the gallows-bird who was still corporal of our troop: it was not long before Raffles was to have his wish and the traitorโs wicket. We had resumed our advance, or rather our humble part in the great surrounding movement then taking place, and were under pretty heavy fire once more, when Connal was shot in the hand. It was a curious casualty in more than one respect, and nobody seems to have seen it happen. Though a flesh wound, it was a bloody one, and that may be why the surgeon did not at once detect those features which afterwards convinced him that the injury had been self-inflicted. It was the right hand, and until it healed the man could be of no further use in the firing line; nor was the case serious enough for admission to a crowded field-hospital; and Connal himself offered his services as custodian of a number of our horses which we were keeping out of harmโs way in a donga. They had come there in the following manner. That morning we had been heliographed to reinforce the C.M.R., only to find that the enemy had the range to a nicety when we reached the spot. There were trenches for us men, but no place of safety for our horses nearer than this long and narrow donga which ran from within our lines towards those of the Boers. So some of us galloped them thither, six-in-hand, amid the whine of shrapnel and the whistle of shot. I remember the man next me being killed by a shell with all his team, and the tangle of flying harness, torn horseflesh, and crimson khaki, that we left behind us on the veldt; also that a small red flag, ludicrously like those used to indicate a putting-green, marked the single sloping entrance to the otherwise precipitous donga, which I for one was duly thankful to reach alive.
The same evening Connal, with a few other light casualties to assist him, took over the charge for which he had volunteered and for which he was so admirably
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