The Council of Justice by Edgar Wallace (simple e reader txt) 📕
So the Woman of Gratz arrived, and they talked about her and circulated her speeches in every language. And she grew. The hollow face of this lank girl filled, and the flat bosom rounded and there came softer lines and curves to her angular figure, and, almost before they realized the fact, she was beautiful.
So her fame had grown until her father died and she went to Russia. Then came a series of outrages which may be categorically and briefly set forth:--
1: General Maloff shot dead by an unknown woman in his private room at the Police Bureau, Moscow.
2: Prince Hazallarkoff shot dead by an unknown woman in the streets of Petrograd.
3: Colonel Kaverdavskov killed by a bomb thrown by a woman who made her escape.
And the Woman of Grat
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little, and his restless hands were even more agitated as he replied
slowly:
‘If anybody can tell me exactly what the Four Just Men—what their
particular line of business is, I could reply to that.’
It was the old man sipping his gin in silence who spoke for the
first time.
‘D’ye remember Billy Marks?’ he asked.
His voice was harsh, as is that of a man who uses his voice at rare
intervals.
‘Billy Marks is dead,’ he continued, ‘deader than a door-nail. He
knew the Four Just Men; pinched the watch an’ the notebook of one an’
nearly pinched them.’
There was a man who sat next to Falk who had been regarding Charles
with furtive attention.
Now he turned to Jessen and spoke to the point. ‘Don’t get any idea
in your head that the likes of us will ever have anything to do with
the Four,’ he said. ‘Why, Mr. Long,’ he went on, ‘the Four Just Men are
as likely to come to you as to us; bein’ as you are a government
official, it’s very likely indeed.’
Again Jessen and Charles exchanged a swift glance, and in the eyes
of the journalist was a strange light.
Suppose they came to Jessen! It was not unlikely. Once before, in
pursuing their vengeance in a South American State, they had come to
such a man as Jessen. It was a thought, and one worth following.
Turning the possibilities over in his mind Charles stood deep in
thought as Jessen, still speaking, was helped into his overcoat by
one of the men.
Then as they left the hall together, passing the custodian of the
place at the foot of the stairs, the journalist turned to his
companion.
‘Should they come to you—?’
Jessen shook his head.
‘That is unlikely,’ he said; ‘they hardly require outside help.’
They walked the rest of the way in silence.
Charles shook hands at the door of Jessen’s house.
‘If by any chance they should come—’ he said.
Jessen laughed.
‘I will let you know,’ he said a little ironically.
Then he entered his house, and Charles heard again the snap of the
lock as the strange man closed the door behind him.
Within twenty-four hours the newspapers recorded the mysterious
disappearance of a Mr. J. Long, of Presley Street. Such a disappearance
would have been without interest, but for a note that was found on his
table. It ran:
Mr. Long being necessary for our purpose, we have taken him.
THE FOUR JUST MEN
That the affair had connection with the Four was sufficient to give
it an extraordinary news value. That the press was confounded goes
without saying. For Mr. Long was a fairly unimportant man with some
self-education and a craze for reforming the criminal classes. But the
Home Office, which knew Mr. Long as ‘Mr. Jessen’, was greatly
perturbed, and the genius of Scotland Yard was employed to discover his
whereabouts.
CHAPTER IV. The Red Bean
The Inner Council sent out an urgent call to the men who administer
the affairs of the Red Hundred.
Starque came, Francois, the Frenchman, came, Hollom, the Italian,
Paul Mirtisky, George Grabe, the American, and Lauder Bartholomew, the
ex-captain of Irregular Cavalry, came also. Bartholomew was the best
dressed of the men who gathered about the green table in Greek Street,
for he had held the King’s commission, which is of itself a sartorial
education. People who met him vaguely remembered his name and frowned.
They had a dim idea that there was ‘something against him’, but were
not quite sure what it was. It had to do with the South African War and
a surrender—not an ordinary surrender, but an arrangement with the
enemy on a cash basis, and the transference of stores. There was a
court martial, and a cashiering, and afterwards Bartholomew came to
England and bombarded first the War Office and then the press with a
sheaf of type-written grievances. Afterwards he went into the
theatrical line of business and appeared in music-hall sketches as
‘Captain Lauder Bartholomew—the Hero of Dopfontein’.
There were other chapters which made good reading, for he figured in
a divorce case, ran a society newspaper, owned a few selling platers,
and achieved the distinction of appearing in the Racing Calendar
in a paragraph which solemnly and officially forbade his presence on
Newmarket Heath.
That he should figure on the Inner Council of the Red Hundred is
remarkable only in so far as it demonstrates how much out of touch with
British sentiments and conditions is the average continental
politician. For Bartholomew’s secret application to be enrolled a
member of the Red Hundred had been received with acclamation and his
promotion to the Inner Council had been rapid. Was he not an English
officer—an aristocrat? A member of the most exclusive circle of
English society? Thus argued the Red Hundred, to whom a subaltern in a
scallywag corps did not differ perceptibly from a Commander of the
Household Cavalry.
Bartholomew lied his way to the circle, because he found, as he had
all along suspected, that there was a strong business end to terrorism.
There were grants for secret service work, and with his fertile
imagination it was not difficult to find excuses and reasons for
approaching the financial executive of the Red Hundred at frequent
intervals. He claimed intimacy with royal personages. He not only
stated as a fact that he was in their confidence, but he suggested
family ties which reflected little credit upon his progenitors.
The Red Hundred was a paying speculation; membership of the Inner
Council was handsomely profitable. He had drawn a bow at a venture when
under distress—literally it was a distress warrant issued at the
instance of an importunate landlord—he had indited a letter to a
revolutionary offering to act as London agent for an organization which
was then known as The Friends of the People, but which has since been
absorbed into the body corporate of the Red Hundred. It is necessary to
deal fully with the antecedents of this man because he played a part in
the events that are chronicled in the Council of Justice that had
effects further reaching than Bartholomew, the mercenary of anarchism,
could in his wildest moments have imagined.
He was one of the seven that gathered in the dingy drawing-room of a
Greek Street boarding-house, and it was worthy of note that five of his
fellows greeted him with a deference amounting to humility. The
exception was Starque, who, arriving late, found an admiring circle
hanging upon the words of this young man with the shifty eyes, and he
frowned his displeasure.
Bartholomew looked up as Starque entered and nodded carelessly.
Starque took his place at the head of the table, and motioned
impatiently to the others to be seated. One, whose duty it was, rose
from his chair and locked the door. The windows were shuttered, but he
inspected the fastenings; then, taking from his pocket two packs of
cards, he scattered them in a confused heap upon the table. Every man
produced a handful of money and placed it before him.
Starque was an ingenious man and had learnt many things in Russia.
Men who gather round a green baize-covered table with locked doors are
apt to be dealt with summarily if no adequate excuse for their presence
is evident, and it is more satisfactory to be fined a hundred roubles
for gambling than to be dragged off at a moment’s notice to an
indefinite period of labour in the mines on suspicion of being
concerned in a revolutionary plot.
Starque now initiated the business of the evening. If the truth be
told, there was little in the earlier proceedings that differed from
the procedure of the typical committee.
There were monies to be voted. Bartholomew needed supplies for a
trip to Paris, where, as the guest of an Illustrious Personage, he
hoped to secure information of vital importance to the Hundred.
‘This is the fourth vote in two months, comrade,’ said Starque
testily, ‘last time it was for information from your Foreign Office,
which proved to be inaccurate.’
Bartholomew shrugged his shoulders with an assumption of
carelessness.
‘If you doubt the wisdom of voting the money, let it pass,’ he said;
‘my men fly high—I am not bribing policemen or sous-officiers
of diplomacy.’
‘It is not a question of money,’ said Starque sullenly, ‘it is a
question of results. Money we have in plenty, but the success of our
glorious demonstration depends upon the reliability of our
information.’
The vote was passed, and with its passing came a grim element into
the council.
Starque leant forward and lowered his voice.
There are matters that need your immediate attention,’ he said. He
took a paper from his pocket, and smoothed it open in front of him. ‘We
have been so long inactive that the tyrants to whom the name of Red
Hundred is full of terror, have come to regard themselves as immune
from danger. Yet,’ his voice sank lower, ‘yet we are on the eve of the
greatest of our achievements, when the oppressors of the people shall
be moved at one blow! And we will strike a blow at kingship as shall be
remembered in the history of the world aye, when the victories of
Caesar and Alexander are forgotten and when the scenes of our acts are
overlaid with the dust and debris of a thousand years. But that great
day is not yet—first we must remove the lesser men that the blow may
fall surer; first the servant, then the master.’ He stabbed the list
before him with a thick forefinger.
‘Fritz von Hedlitz,’ he read, ‘Chancellor to the Duchy of
Hamburg-Altoona.’
He looked round the board and smiled.
‘A man of some initiative, comrades—he foiled our attempt on his
master with some cunning—do I interpret your desire when I
say—death?’
‘Death!’
It was a low murmured chorus.
Bartholomew, renegade and adventurer, said it mechanically. It was
nothing to him a brave gentleman should die for no other reason than
that he had served his master faithfully.
‘Marquis de Santo-Strato, private secretary to the Prince of the
Escorial,’ read Starque.
‘Death!’ Again the murmured sentence.
One by one, Starque read the names, stopping now and again to
emphasize some enormity of the man under review.
‘Here is Hendrik Houssmann,’ he said, tapping the paper, ‘of the
Berlin Secret Police: an interfering man and a dangerous one. He has
already secured the arrest and punishment of one of our comrades.’
‘Death,’ murmured the council mechanically.
The list took half an hour to dispose of.
‘There is another matter,’ said Starque.
The council moved uneasily, for that other matter was uppermost in
every mind.
‘By some means we have been betrayed,’ the chairman went on, and his
voice lacked that confidence which characterized his earlier speech;
‘there is an organization—an organization of reaction—which has set
itself to thwart us. That organization has discovered our identity.’ He
paused a little.
‘This morning I received a letter which named me president of the
Inner Council and threatened me.’ Again he hesitated.
‘It was signed “The Four Just Men”.’
His statement was received in dead silence—a silence that perplexed
him, for his compensation for the shock he had received had been the
anticipation of the sensation his announcement would make.
He was soon enlightened as to the cause of the silence.
‘I also have received a letter,’ said Francois quietly.
‘And I.’
‘And I.’
‘And I.’
Only
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