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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inspiration that it would be amusing to learn what move Roddy would
make when the tension became too much even for his trained nerves.
Several seconds passed without the least sound disturbing the stillness.
Lanyard himself grew a little impatient, finding that his sight failed
to grow accustomed to the darkness because that last was too absolute,
pressing against his staring eyeballs like a black fluid impenetrably
opaque, as unbroken as the hush.
Still, he waited: surely Roddy wouldn’t be able much longer to endure
such suspense….
And, surely enough, the silence was abruptly broken by a strange and
moving sound, a hushed cry of alarm that was half a moan and half a sob.
Lanyard himself was startled: for that was never Roddy’s voice!
There was a noise of muffled and confused footsteps, as though someone
had started in panic for the door, then stopped in terror.
Words followed, the strangest he could have imagined, words spoken in a
gentle and tremulous voice:
“In pity’s name! who are you and what do you want?”
Thunderstruck, Lanyard switched on the lights.
At a distance of some six paces he saw, not Roddy, but a woman, and not
a woman merely, but the girl he had met in the restaurant.
V ANTICLIMAXThe surprise was complete; none, indeed, was ever more so; but it’s a
question which party thereto was the more affected.
Lanyard stared with the eyes of stupefaction. To his fancy, this thing
passed the compass of simple incredulity: it wasn’t merely improbable,
it was preposterous; it was anticlimax exaggerated to the proportions
of the grotesque.
He had come prepared to surprise and bully rag the most astute police
detective of whom he had any knowledge; he found himself surprised and
discountenanced by this…!
Confusion no less intense informed the girl’s expression; her eyes were
fixed to his with a look of blank enquiry; her face, whose colouring
had won his admiration two hours since, was colourless; her lips were
just ajar; the fingers of one hand touched her cheek, indenting it.
The other hand caught up before her the long skirts of a pretty
robe-de-chambre, beneath whose edge a hand’s-breadth of white silk
shimmered and the toe of a silken mule was visible. Thus she stood,
poised for flight, attired only in a dressing-gown over what, one
couldn’t help suspecting, was her night-dress: for her hair was down,
and she was unquestionably all ready for her bed….But Bourke’s
patient training had been wasted if this man proved one to remain long
at loss. Rallying his wits quickly from their momentary rout, he
reasserted command over them, and if he didn’t in the least understand,
made a brave show of accepting this amazing accident as a commonplace.
“I beg your pardon, Miss Bannon—” he began with a formal bow.
She interrupted with a gasp of wondering recognition:
“Mr. Lanyard!”
He inclined his head a second time: “Sorry to disturb you—”
“But I don’t understand—”
“Unfortunately,” he proceeded smoothly, “I forgot something when I went
out, and had to come back for it.”
“But—but—”
“Yes?”
Suddenly her eyes, for the first time detached from his, swept the room
with a glance of wild dismay.
“This room,” she breathed—“I don’t know it—”
“It is mine.”
“Yours! But—”
“That is how I happened to—interrupt you.”
The girl shrank back a pace—two paces—uttering a low-toned
monosyllable of understanding, an “O!” abruptly gasped.
Simultaneously her face and throat flamed scarlet.
“Your room, Mr. Lanyard!”
Her tone so convincingly voiced shame and horror that his heart misgave
him. Not that alone, but the girl was very good to look upon. “I’m
sure,” he began soothingly; “it doesn’t matter. You mistook a door—”
“But you don’t understand!” She shuddered….
“This dreadful habit! And I was hoping I had outgrown it! How can I ever
explain—?”
“Believe me, Miss Bannon, you need explain nothing.”
“But I must…I wish to…I can’t bear to let you think…But surely
you can make allowances for sleepwalking!”
To this appeal he could at first return nothing more intelligent than a
dazed repetition of the phrase.
So that was how…Why hadn’t he thought of it before? Ever since he had
turned on the lights, he had been subjectively busy trying to invest her
presence there with some plausible excuse. But somnambulism had never
once entered his mind. And in his stupidity, at pains though he had
been to render his words inoffensive, he had been guilty of
constructive incivility.
In his turn, Lanyard coloured warmly.
“I beg your pardon,” he muttered.
The girl paid no attention; she seemed self-absorbed, thinking only of
herself and the anomalous position into which her infirmity had tricked
her. When she did speak, her words came swiftly:
“You see…I was so frightened! I found myself suddenly standing up in
darkness, just as if I had jumped out of bed at some alarm; and then I
heard somebody enter the room and shut the door stealthily…Oh, please
understand me!”
“But I do, Miss Bannon—quite.”
“I am so ashamed—”
“Please don’t consider it that way.”
“But now that you know—you don’t think—”
“My dear Miss Bannon!”
“But it must be so hard to credit! Even I… Why, it’s more than a year
since this last happened. Of course, as a child, it was almost a habit;
they had to watch me all the time. Once… But that doesn’t matter. I
am so sorry.”
“You really mustn’t worry,” Lanyard insisted. “It’s all quite
natural—such things do happen—are happening all the time—”
“But I don’t want you—”
“I am nobody, Miss Bannon. Besides I shan’t mention the matter to a
soul. And if ever I am fortunate enough to meet you again, I shall have
forgotten it completely—believe me.”
There was convincing sincerity in his tone. The girl looked down, as
though abashed.
“You are very good,” she murmured, moving toward the door.
“I am very fortunate.”
Her glance of surprise was question enough.
“To be able to treasure this much of your confidence,” he explained
with a tentative smile.
She was near the door; he opened it for her, but cautioned her with a
gesture and a whispered word: “Wait. I’ll make sure nobody’s about.”
He stepped noiselessly into the hall and paused an instant, looking
right and left, listening.
The girl advanced to the threshold and there checked, hesitant, eyeing
him anxiously.
He nodded reassurance: “All right—coast’s clear!”
But she delayed one moment more.
“It’s you who are mistaken,” she whispered, colouring again beneath his
regard, in which admiration could not well be lacking, “It is I who am
fortunate—to have met a—gentleman.”
Her diffident smile, together with the candour of her eyes, embarrassed
him to such extent that for the moment he was unable to frame a reply.
“Good night,” she whispered—“and thank you, thank you!”
Her room was at the far end of the corridor. She gained its threshold
in one swift dash, noiseless save for the silken whisper of her
garments, turned, flashed him a final look that left him with the
thought that novelists did not always exaggerate, that eyes could shine
like stars….
Her door closed softly.
Lanyard shook his head as if to dissipate a swarm of annoying thoughts,
and went back into his own bedchamber.
He was quite content with the explanation the girl had given, but being
the slave of a methodical and pertinacious habit of mind, spent five
busy minutes examining his room and all that it contained with a
perseverance that would have done credit to a Frenchman searching for a
mislaid sou.
If pressed, he would have been put to it to name what he sought or
thought to find. What he did find was that nothing had been tampered
with and nothing more—not even so much as a dainty, lace-trimmed wisp
of sheer linen bearing the lady’s monogram and exhaling a faint but
individual perfume.
Which, when he came to consider it, seemed hardly playing the game by
the book.
As for Roddy, Lanyard wasted several minutes, off and on, listening
attentively at the communicating door; but if the detective had stopped
snoring, his respiration was loud enough in that quiet hour, a sound of
harsh monotony.
True, that proved nothing; but Lanyard, after the fiasco of his first
attempt to catch his enemy awake, was no more disposed to be
hypercritical; he had his fill of being ingenious and profound. And
when presently he again left Troyon’s (this time without troubling the
repose of the concierge) it was with the reflection that, if Roddy were
really playing ‘possum, he was welcome to whatever he could find of
interest in the quarters of Michael Lanyard.
VI THE PACK GIVES TONGUELanyard’s first destination was that convenient little rez-de-chauss�e
apartment near the Trocad�ro, at the junction of the rue Roget and the
avenue de l’Alma; but his way thither was so roundabout that the best
part of an hour was required for what might have been less than a
twenty-minute taxicab course direct from Troyon’s. It was past one when
he arrived, afoot, at the corner.
Not that he grudged the time; for in Lanyard’s esteem Bourke’s epigram
had come to have the weight and force of an axiom: “The more trouble
you make for yourself, the less the good public will make for you.”
Paradoxically, he hadn’t the least intention of attempting to deceive
anybody as to his permanent address in Paris, where Michael Lanyard,
connoisseur of fine paintings, was a figure too conspicuous to permit
his making a secret of his residence. De Morbihan, moreover, through
recognizing him at Troyon’s, had rendered it impossible for Lanyard to
adopt a nom-de-guerre there, even had he thought that ruse advisable.
But he had certain businesses to attend to before dawn, affairs
demanding privacy; and while by no means sure he was followed, one can
seldom be sure of anything, especially in Paris, where nothing is
impossible; and it were as well to lose a spy first as last. And his
mind could not be at ease with respect to Roddy, thanks to De
Morbihan’s gasconade in the presence of the detective and also to that
hint which the Count had dropped concerning some fatal blunder in the
course of Lanyard’s British campaign.
The adventurer could recall leaving no step uncovered. Indeed, he had
prided himself on conducting his operations with a degree of
circumspection unusually thorough-going, even for him. Yet he was
unable to rid himself of those misgivings roused by De Morbihan’s
declaration that the theft of the Omber jewels had been accomplished
only at cost of a clue to the thief’s identity.
Now the Count’s positive information concerning the robbery proved that
the news thereof had anticipated the arrival of its perpetrator in
Paris; yet Roddy unquestionably had known nothing of it prior to its
mention in his presence, after dinner. Or else the detective was a
finer actor than Lanyard credited.
But how could De Morbihan have come by his news?
Lanyard was really and deeply perturbed….
Pestered to distraction by such thoughts, he fitted key to latch and
quietly let himself into his flat by a private street-entrance which,
in addition to the usual door opening on the court and under the eye of
the concierge, distinguished this from the ordinary Parisian apartment
and rendered it doubly suited to the adventurer’s uses.
Then he turned on the lights and moved quickly from room to room of the
three comprising his
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