The Black Mask by E. W. Hornung (read after .TXT) ๐
Description
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.
Read free book ยซThe Black Mask by E. W. Hornung (read after .TXT) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: E. W. Hornung
Read book online ยซThe Black Mask by E. W. Hornung (read after .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - E. W. Hornung
โI have found the spot, Bunny,โ he whispered; โwe ought to out him before the night is over.โ
โConnal?โ
Raffles nodded.
โYou know what happened to some of his horses last night? Well, he let them go himself.โ
โNever!โ
โIโm as certain of it,โ said Raffles, โas though Iโd seen him do it; and if he does it again I shall see him. I can even tell you how it happened. Connal insisted on having one end of the donga to himself, and of course his end is the one nearest the Boers. Well, then, he tells the other fellows to go to sleep at their endโ โI have it direct from one of themโ โand you bet they donโt need a second invitation. The rest I hope to see tonight.โ
โIt seems almost incredible,โ said I.
โNot more so than the Light Horsemanโs dodge of poisoning the troughs; that happened at Ladysmith before Christmas; and two kind friends did for that blackguard what you and I are going to do for this one, and a firing-party did the rest. Brutes! A mounted manโs worth a file on foot in this country, and well they know it. But this beauty goes one better than the poison; that was wilful waste; but Iโll eat my wideawake if our loss last night wasnโt the enemyโs double gain! What weโve got to do, Bunny, is to catch him in the act. It may mean watching him all night, but was ever game so well worth the candle?โ
One may say in passing that, at this particular point of contact, the enemy were in superior force, and for once in a mood as aggressive as our own. They were led with a dash, and handled with a skill, which did not always characterize their commanders at this stage of the war. Their position was very similar to ours, and indeed we were to spend the whole of next day in trying with an equal will to turn each other out. The result will scarcely be forgotten by those who recognize the occasion from these remarks. Meanwhile it was the eve of battle (most evenings were), and there was that villain with the horses in the donga, and here were we two upon his track.
Rafflesโs plan was to reconnoitre the place, and then take up a position from which we could watch our man and pounce upon him if he gave us cause. The spot that we eventually chose and stealthily occupied was behind some bushes through which we could see down into the donga; there were the precious horses; and there sure enough was our wounded corporal, sitting smoking in his cloak, some glimmering thing in his lap.
โThatโs his revolver, and itโs a Mauser,โ whispered Raffles. โHe shanโt have a chance of using it on us; either we must be on him before he knows we are anywhere near, or simply report. Itโs easily proved once we are sure; but I should like to have the taking of him too.โ
There was a setting moon. Shadows were sharp and black. The man smoked steadily, and the hungry horses did what I never saw horses do before; they stood and nibbled at each otherโs tails. I was used to sleeping in the open, under the jewelled dome that seems so much vaster and grander in these wide spaces of the earth. I lay listening to the horses, and to the myriad small strange voices of the veldt, to which I cannot even now put a name, while Raffles watched. โOne head is better than two,โ he said, โwhen you donโt want it to be seen.โ We were to take watch and watch about, however, and the other might sleep if he could; it was not my fault that I did nothing else; it was Raffles who could trust nobody but himself. Nor was there any time for recriminations when he did rouse me in the end.
But a moment ago, as it seemed to me, I had been gazing upward at the stars and listening to the dear, minute sounds of peace; and in another the great gray slate was clean, and every bone of me set in plaster of Paris, and sniping beginning between pickets with the day. It was an occasional crack, not a constant crackle, but the whistle of a bullet as it passed us by, or a tiny transitory flame for the one bit of detail on a blue hillside, was an unpleasant warning that we two on ours were a target in ourselves. But Raffles paid no attention to their fire; he was pointing downward through the bushes to where Corporal Connal stood with his back to us, shooing a last charger out of the mouth of the donga towards the Boer trenches.
โThatโs his third,โ whispered Raffles, โbut itโs the first Iโve seen distinctly, for he waited for the blind spot before the dawn. Itโs enough to land him, I fancy, but we mustnโt lose time. Are you ready for a creep?โ
I stretched myself, and said I was; but I devoutly wished it was not quite so early in the morning.
โLike cats, then, till he hears, and then into him for all weโre worth. Heโs stowed his iron safe away, but he mustnโt have time even to feel for it. You take his left arm, Bunny, and hang on to that like a ferret, and Iโll do the rest. Ready? Then now!โ
And in less time than it would take to tell, we were over the lip of the donga and had fallen upon the fellow before he could turn his head; nevertheless, for a few instants he fought like a wild beast, striking, kicking, and swinging me off my feet
Comments (0)