I had turned into Piccadilly, one
thick evening in the following November, when my guilty
heart stood still at the sudden grip of a hand upon
my arm. I thought-I was always thinking-that
my inevitable hour was come at last. It was
only Raffles, however, who stood smiling at me through
the fog.
“Well met!” said he.
“I’ve been looking for you at the club.”
“I was just on my way there,”
I returned, with an attempt to hide my tremors.
It was an ineffectual attempt, as I saw from his broader
smile, and by the indulgent shake of his head.
“Come up to my place instead,”
said he. “I’ve something amusing
to tell you.”
I made excuses, for his tone foretold
the kind of amusement, and it was a kind against which
I had successfully set my face for months. I
have stated before, however, and I can but reiterate,
that to me, at all events, there was never anybody
in the world so irresistible as Raffles when his mind
was made up. That we had both been independent
of crime since our little service to Sir Bernard Debenham-that
there had been no occasion for that masterful mind
to be made up in any such direction for many a day-was
the undeniable basis of a longer spell of honesty
than I had hitherto enjoyed during the term of our
mutual intimacy. Be sure I would deny it if
I could; the very thing I am to tell you would discredit
such a boast. I made my excuses, as I have said.
But his arm slid through mine, with
his little laugh of light-hearted mastery. And
even while I argued we were on his staircase in the
Albany.
His fire had fallen low. He
poked and replenished it after lighting the gas.
As for me, I stood by sullenly in my overcoat until
he dragged it off my back.
“What a chap you are!”
said Raffles, playfully. “One would really
think I had proposed to crack another crib this blessed
night! Well, it isn’t that, Bunny; so
get into that chair, and take one of these Sullivans
and sit tight.”
He held the match to my cigarette;
he brought me a whiskey and soda. Then he went
out into the lobby, and, just as I was beginning to
feel happy, I heard a bolt shot home. It cost
me an effort to remain in that chair; next moment
he was straddling another and gloating over my discomfiture
across his folded arms.
“You remember Milchester, Bunny, old boy?”
His tone was as bland as mine was grim when I answered
that I did.
“We had a little match there
that wasn’t down on the card. Gentlemen
and Players, if you recollect?”
“I don’t forget it.”
“Seeing that you never got an
innings, so to speak, I thought you might. Well,
the Gentlemen scored pretty freely, but the Players
were all caught.”
“Poor devils!”
“Don’t be too sure.
You remember the fellow we saw in the inn? The
florid, over-dressed chap who I told you was one of
the cleverest thieves in town?”
“I remember him. Crawshay his name turned
out to be.”
“Well, it was certainly the
name he was convicted under, so Crawshay let it be.
You needn’t waste any pity on him, old
chap; he escaped from Dartmoor yesterday afternoon.”
“Well done!”
Raffles smiled, but his eyebrows had
gone up, and his shoulders followed suit.
“You are perfectly right; it
was very well done indeed. I wonder you didn’t
see it in the paper. In a dense fog on the moor
yesterday good old Crawshay made a bolt for it, and
got away without a scratch under heavy fire.
All honor to him, I agree; a fellow with that much
grit deserves his liberty. But Crawshay has
a good deal more. They hunted him all night long;
couldn’t find him for nuts; and that was all
you missed in the morning papers.”
He unfolded a Pall Mall, which he
had brought in with him.
“But listen to this; here’s
an account of the escape, with just the addition which
puts the thing on a higher level. ’The
fugitive has been traced to Totnes, where he appears
to have committed a peculiarly daring outrage in the
early hours of this morning. He is reported to
have entered the lodgings of the Rev. A. H. Ellingworth,
curate of the parish, who missed his clothes on rising
at the usual hour; later in the morning those of the
convict were discovered neatly folded at the bottom
of a drawer. Meanwhile Crawshay had made good
his second escape, though it is believed that so distinctive
a guise will lead to his recapture during the day.’
What do you think of that, Bunny?”
“He is certainly a sportsman,”
said I, reaching for the paper.
“He’s more,” said
Raffles, “he’s an artist, and I envy him.
The curate, of all men! Beautiful-beautiful!
But that’s not all. I saw just now on
the board at the club that there’s been an outrage
on the line near Dawlish. Parson found insensible
in the six-foot way. Our friend again!
The telegram doesn’t say so, but it’s
obvious; he’s simply knocked some other fellow
out, changed clothes again, and come on gayly to town.
Isn’t it great? I do believe it’s
the best thing of the kind that’s ever been
done!”
“But why should he come to town?”
In an instant the enthusiasm faded
from Raffles’s face; clearly I had reminded
him of some prime anxiety, forgotten in his impersonal
joy over the exploit of a fellow-criminal. He
looked over his shoulder towards the lobby before
replying.
“I believe,” said he, “that the
beggar’s on my tracks!”
And as he spoke he was himself again-quietly
amused-cynically unperturbed-characteristically
enjoying the situation and my surprise.
“But look here, what do you
mean?” said I. “What does Crawshay
know about you?”
“Not much; but he suspects.”
“Why should he?”
“Because, in his way he’s
very nearly as good a man as I am; because, my dear
Bunny, with eyes in his head and brains behind them,
he couldn’t help suspecting. He saw me
once in town with old Baird. He must have seen
me that day in the pub on the way to Milchester, as
well as afterwards on the cricket-field. As
a matter of fact, I know he did, for he wrote and
told me so before his trial.”
“He wrote to you! And you never told me!”
The old shrug answered the old grievance.
“What was the good, my dear fellow? It
would only have worried you.”
“Well, what did he say?”
“That he was sorry he had been
run in before getting back to town, as he had proposed
doing himself the honor of paying me a call; however,
he trusted it was only a pleasure deferred, and he
begged me not to go and get lagged myself before he
came out. Of course he knew the Melrose necklace
was gone, though he hadn’t got it; and he said
that the man who could take that and leave the rest
was a man after his own heart. And so on, with
certain little proposals for the far future, which
I fear may be the very near future indeed! I’m
only surprised he hasn’t turned up yet.”
He looked again towards the lobby,
which he had left in darkness, with the inner door
shut as carefully as the outer one. I asked him
what he meant to do.
“Let him knock-if
he gets so far. The porter is to say I’m
out of town; it will be true, too, in another hour
or so.”
“You’re going off to-night?”
“By the 7.15 from Liverpool
Street. I don’t say much about my people,
Bunny, but I have the best of sisters married to a
country parson in the eastern counties. They
always make me welcome, and let me read the lessons
for the sake of getting me to church. I’m
sorry you won’t be there to hear me on Sunday,
Bunny. I’ve figured out some of my best
schemes in that parish, and I know of no better port
in a storm. But I must pack. I thought
I’d just let you know where I was going, and
why, in case you cared to follow my example.”
He flung the stump of his cigarette
into the fire, stretched himself as he rose, and remained
so long in the inelegant attitude that my eyes mounted
from his body to his face; a second later they had
followed his eyes across the room, and I also was
on my legs. On the threshold of the folding
doors that divided bedroom and sitting-room, a well-built
man stood in ill-fitting broadcloth, and bowed to us
until his bullet head presented an unbroken disk of
short red hair.
Brief as was my survey of this astounding
apparition, the interval was long enough for Raffles
to recover his composure; his hands were in his pockets,
and a smile upon his face, when my eyes flew back to
him.
“Let me introduce you, Bunny,”
said he, “to our distinguished colleague, Mr.
Reginald Crawshay.”
The bullet head bobbed up, and there
was a wrinkled brow above the coarse, shaven face,
crimson also, I remember, from the grip of a collar
several sizes too small. But I noted nothing
consciously at the time. I had jumped to my
own conclusion, and I turned on Raffles with an oath.
“It’s a trick!”
I cried. “It’s another of your cursed
tricks! You got him here, and then you got me.
You want me to join you, I suppose? I’ll
see you damned!”
So cold was the stare which met this
outburst that I became ashamed of my words while they
were yet upon my lips.
“Really, Bunny!” said
Raffles, and turned his shoulder with a shrug.
“Lord love yer,” cried
Crawshay, “‘E knew nothin’.
’E didn’t expect me; ’e’s
all right. And you’re the cool canary,
you are,” he went on to Raffles.
“I knoo you were, but, do me proud, you’re
one after my own kidney!” And he thrust out
a shaggy hand.
“After that,” said Raffles,
taking it, “what am I to say? But you must
have heard my opinion of you. I am proud to make
your acquaintance. How the deuce did you get
in?”
“Never you mind,” said
Crawshay, loosening his collar; “let’s
talk about how I’m to get out. Lord love
yer, but that’s better!”
There was a livid ring round his bull-neck,
that he fingered tenderly. “Didn’t
know how much longer I might have to play the gent,”
he explained; “didn’t know who you’d
bring in.”
“Drink whiskey and soda?”
inquired Raffles, when the convict was in the chair
from which I had leapt.
“No, I drink it neat,”
replied Crawshay, “but I talk business first.
You don’t get over me like that, Lor’ love
yer!”
“Well, then, what can I do for you?”
“You know without me tellin’ you.”
“Give it a name.”
“Clean heels, then; that’s
what I want to show, and I leaves the way to you.
We’re brothers in arms, though I ain’t
armed this time. It ain’t necessary.
You’ve too much sense. But brothers we
are, and you’ll see a brother through.
Let’s put it at that. You’ll see
me through in yer own way. I leaves it all to
you.”
His tone was rich with conciliation
and concession; he bent over and tore a pair of button
boots from his bare feet, which he stretched towards
the fire, painfully uncurling his toes.
“I hope you take a larger size
than them,” said he. “I’d have
had a see if you’d given me time. I wasn’t
in long afore you.”
“And you won’t tell me how you got in?”
“Wot’s the use?
I can’t teach you nothin’. Besides,
I want out. I want out of London, an’
England, an’ bloomin’ Europe too.
That’s all I want of you, mister. I don’t
arst how you go on the job. You know w’ere
I come from, ’cos I ’eard you say; you
know w’ere I want to ’ead for, ’cos
I’ve just told yer; the details I leaves entirely
to you.”
“Well,” said Raffles, “we must see
what can be done.”
“We must,” said Mr. Crawshay,
and leaned back comfortably, and began twirling his
stubby thumbs.
Raffles turned to me with a twinkle
in his eye; but his forehead was scored with thought,
and resolve mingled with resignation in the lines
of his mouth. And he spoke exactly as though
he and I were alone in the room.
“You seize the situation, Bunny?
If our friend here is ‘copped,’ to speak
his language, he means to ‘blow the gaff’
on you and me. He is considerate enough not
to say so in so many words, but it’s plain enough,
and natural enough for that matter. I would do
the same in his place. We had the bulge before;
he has it now; it’s perfectly fair. We
must take on this job; we aren’t in a position
to refuse it; even if we were, I should take it on!
Our friend is a great sportsman; he has got clear
away from Dartmoor; it would be a thousand pities to
let him go back. Nor shall he; not if I can
think of a way of getting him abroad.”
“Any way you like,” murmured
Crawshay, with his eyes shut. “I leaves
the ’olé thing to you.”
“But you’ll have to wake up and tell us
things.”
“All right, mister; but I’m fair on the
rocks for a sleep!”
And he stood up, blinking.
“Think you were traced to town?”
“Must have been.”
“And here?”
“Not in this fog-not with any luck.”
Raffles went into the bedroom, lit
the gas there, and returned next minute.
“So you got in by the window?”
“That’s about it.”
“It was devilish smart of you
to know which one; it beats me how you brought it
off in daylight, fog or no fog! But let that
pass. You don’t think you were seen?”
“I don’t think it, sir.”
“Well, let’s hope you
are right. I shall reconnoitre and soon find
out. And you’d better come too, Bunny,
and have something to eat and talk it over.”
As Raffles looked at me, I looked
at Crawshay, anticipating trouble; and trouble brewed
in his blank, fierce face, in the glitter of his startled
eyes, in the sudden closing of his fists.
“And what’s to become o’ me?”
he cried out with an oath.
“You wait here.”
“No, you don’t,”
he roared, and at a bound had his back to the door.
“You don’t get round me like that, you
cuckoos!”
Raffles turned to me with a twitch
of the shoulders. “That’s the worst
of these professors,” said he; “they never
will use their heads. They see the pegs, and
they mean to hit ’em; but that’s all they
do see and mean, and they think we’re the same.
No wonder we licked them last time!”
“Don’t talk through yer
neck,” snarled the convict. “Talk
out straight, curse you!”
“Right,” said Raffles.
“I’ll talk as straight as you like.
You say you put yourself in my hands-you
leave it all to me-yet you don’t
trust me an inch! I know what’s to happen
if I fail. I accept the risk. I take this
thing on. Yet you think I’m going straight
out to give you away and make you give me away in
my turn. You’re a fool, Mr. Crawshay,
though you have broken Dartmoor; you’ve got to
listen to a better man, and obey him. I see you
through in my own way, or not at all. I come
and go as I like, and with whom I like, without your
interference; you stay here and lie just as low as
you know how, be as wise as your word, and leave the
whole thing to me. If you won’t-if
you’re fool enough not to trust me-there’s
the door. Go out and say what you like, and
be damned to you!”
Crawshay slapped his thigh.
“That’s talking!”
said he. “Lord love yer, I know where I
am when you talk like that. I’ll trust
yer. I know a man when he gets his tongue between
his teeth; you’re all right. I don’t
say so much about this other gent, though I saw him
along with you on the job that time in the provinces;
but if he’s a pal of yours, Mr. Raffles, he’ll
be all right too. I only hope you gents ain’t
too stony-”
And he touched his pockets with a rueful face.
“I only went for their togs,”
said he. “You never struck two such stony-broke
cusses in yer life!”
“That’s all right,”
said Raffles. “We’ll see you through
properly. Leave it to us, and you sit tight.”
“Rightum!” said Crawshay.
“And I’ll have a sleep time you’re
gone. But no sperrits-no, thank’ee-not
yet! Once let me loose on the lush, and, Lord
love yer, I’m a gone coon!”
Raffles got his overcoat, a long,
light driving-coat, I remember, and even as he put
it on our fugitive was dozing in the chair; we left
him murmuring incoherently, with the gas out, and
his bare feet toasting.
“Not such a bad chap, that professor,”
said Raffles on the stairs; “a real genius in
his way, too, though his methods are a little elementary
for my taste. But technique isn’t everything;
to get out of Dartmoor and into the Albany in the
same twenty-four hours is a whole that justifies its
parts. Good Lord!”
We had passed a man in the foggy courtyard,
and Raffles had nipped my arm.
“Who was it?”
“The last man we want to see! I hope to
heaven he didn’t hear me!”
“But who is he, Raffles?”
“Our old friend Mackenzie, from the Yard!”
I stood still with horror.
“Do you think he’s on Crawshay’s
track?”
“I don’t know. I’ll find out.”
And before I could remonstrate he
had wheeled me round; when I found my voice he merely
laughed, and whispered that the bold course was the
safe one every time.
“But it’s madness-”
“Not it. Shut up! Is that you,
Mr. Mackenzie?”
The detective turned about and scrutinized
us keenly; and through the gaslit mist I noticed that
his hair was grizzled at the temples, and his face
still cadaverous, from the wound that had nearly been
his death.
“Ye have the advantage o’ me, sirs,”
said he.
“I hope you’re fit again,”
said my companion. “My name is Raffles,
and we met at Milchester last year.”
“Is that a fact?” cried
the Scotchman, with quite a start. “Yes,
now I remember your face, and yours too, sir.
Ay, yon was a bad business, but it ended vera
well, an’ that’s the main thing.”
His native caution had returned to
him. Raffles pinched my arm.
“Yes, it ended splendidly, but
for you,” said he. “But what about
this escape of the leader of the gang, that fellow
Crawshay? What do you think of that, eh?”
“I havena the parteeculars,” replied the
Scot.
“Good!” cried Raffles.
“I was only afraid you might be on his tracks
once more!”
Mackenzie shook his head with a dry
smile, and wished us good evening as an invisible
window was thrown up, and a whistle blown softly through
the fog.
“We must see this out,”
whispered Raffles. “Nothing more natural
than a little curiosity on our part. After him,
quick!”
And we followed the detective into
another entrance on the same side as that from which
we had emerged, the left-hand side on one’s way
to Piccadilly; quite openly we followed him, and at
the foot of the stairs met one of the porters of the
place. Raffles asked him what was wrong.
“Nothing, sir,” said the fellow glibly.
“Rot!” said Raffles.
“That was Mackenzie, the detective. I’ve
just been speaking to him. What’s he here
for? Come on, my good fellow; we won’t
give you away, if you’ve instructions not to
tell.”
The man looked quaintly wistful, the
temptation of an audience hot upon him; a door shut
upstairs, and he fell.
“It’s like this,”
he whispered. “This afternoon a gen’leman
comes arfter rooms, and I sent him to the orfice;
one of the clurks, ’e goes round with ‘im
an’ shows ‘im the empties, an’ the
gen’leman’s partic’ly struck on
the set the coppers is up in now. So he sends
the clurk to fetch the manager, as there was one or
two things he wished to speak about; an’ when
they come back, blowed if the gent isn’t gone!
Beg yer pardon, sir, but he’s clean disappeared
off the face o’ the premises!” And the
porter looked at us with shining eyes.
“Well?” said Raffles.
“Well, sir, they looked about,
an’ looked about, an’ at larst they give
him up for a bad job; thought he’d changed his
mind an’ didn’t want to tip the clurk;
so they shut up the place an’ come away.
An’ that’s all till about ’alf an
hour ago, when I takes the manager his extry-speshul
Star; in about ten minutes he comes running out with
a note, an’ sends me with it to Scotland Yard
in a hansom. An’ that’s all I know,
sir-straight. The coppers is up there
now, and the tec, and the manager, and they think
their gent is about the place somewhere still.
Least, I reckon that’s their idea; but who he
is, or what they want him for, I dunno.”
“Jolly interesting!” said
Raffles. “I’m going up to inquire.
Come on, Bunny; there should be some fun.”
“Beg yer pardon, Mr. Raffles,
but you won’t say nothing about me?”
“Not I; you’re a good
fellow. I won’t forget it if this leads
to sport. Sport!” he whispered as we reached
the landing. “It looks like precious poor
sport for you and me, Bunny!”
“What are you going to do?”
“I don’t know. There’s no
time to think. This, to start with.”
And he thundered on the shut door;
a policeman opened it. Raffles strode past him
with the air of a chief commissioner, and I followed
before the man had recovered from his astonishment.
The bare boards rang under us; in the bedroom we
found a knot of officers stooping over the window-ledge
with a constable’s lantern. Mackenzie was
the first to stand upright, and he greeted us with
a glare.
“May I ask what you gentlemen want?” said
he.
“We want to lend a hand,”
said Raffles briskly. “We lent one once
before, and it was my friend here who took over from
you the fellow who split on all the rest, and held
him tightly. Surely that entitles him, at all
events, to see any fun that’s going? As
for myself, well, it’s true I only helped to
carry you to the house; but for old acquaintance I
do hope, my dear Mr. Mackenzie, that you will permit
us to share such sport as there may be. I myself
can only stop a few minutes, in any case.”
“Then ye’ll not see much,”
growled the detective, “for he’s not up
here. Constable, go you and stand at the foot
o’ the stairs, and let no other body come up
on any conseederation; these gentlemen may be able
to help us after all.”
“That’s kind of you, Mackenzie!”
cried Raffles warmly. “But what is it
all? I questioned a porter I met coming down,
but could get nothing out of him, except that somebody
had been to see these rooms and not since been seen
himself.”
“He’s a man we want,”
said Mackenzie. “He’s concealed himself
somewhere about these premises, or I’m vera
much mistaken. D’ye reside in the Albany,
Mr. Raffles?”
“I do.”
“Will your rooms be near these?”
“On the next staircase but one.”
“Ye’ll just have left them?”
“Just.”
“Been in all the afternoon, likely?”
“Not all.”
“Then I may have to search your
rooms, sir. I am prepared to search every room
in the Albany! Our man seems to have gone for
the leads; but unless he’s left more marks outside
than in, or we find him up there, I shall have the
entire building to ransack.”
“I will leave you my key,”
said Raffles at once. “I am dining out,
but I’ll leave it with the officer down below.”
I caught my breath in mute amazement.
What was the meaning of this insane promise?
It was wilful, gratuitous, suicidal; it made me catch
at his sleeve in open horror and disgust; but, with
a word of thanks, Mackenzie had returned to his window-sill,
and we sauntered unwatched through the folding-doors
into the adjoining room. Here the window looked
down into the courtyard; it was still open; and as
we gazed out in apparent idleness, Raffles reassured
me.
“It’s all right, Bunny;
you do what I tell you and leave the rest to me.
It’s a tight corner, but I don’t despair.
What you’ve got to do is to stick to these
chaps, especially if they search my rooms; they mustn’t
poke about more than necessary, and they won’t
if you’re there.”
“But where will you be?
You’re never going to leave me to be landed
alone?”
“If I do, it will be to turn
up trumps at the right moment. Besides, there
are such things as windows, and Crawshay’s the
man to take his risks. You must trust me, Bunny;
you’ve known me long enough.”
“Are you going now?”
“There’s no time to lose.
Stick to them, old chap; don’t let them suspect
you, whatever else you do.” His hand
lay an instant on my shoulder; then he left me at
the window, and recrossed the room.
“I’ve got to go now,”
I heard him say; “but my friend will stay and
see this through, and I’ll leave the gas on
in my rooms, and my key with the constable downstairs.
Good luck, Mackenzie; only wish I could stay.”
“Good-by, sir,” came in
a preoccupied voice, “and many thanks.”
Mackenzie was still busy at his window,
and I remained at mine, a prey to mingled fear and
wrath, for all my knowledge of Raffles and of his
infinite resource. By this time I felt that I
knew more or less what he would do in any given emergency;
at least I could conjecture a characteristic course
of equal cunning and audacity. He would return
to his rooms, put Crawshay on his guard, and-stow
him away? No-there were such things
as windows. Then why was Raffles going to desert
us all? I thought of many things-lastly
of a cab. These bedroom windows looked into
a narrow side-street; they were not very high; from
them a man might drop on to the roof of a cab-even
as it passed-and be driven away even under
the noses of the police! I pictured Raffles
driving that cab, unrecognizable in the foggy night;
the vision came to me as he passed under the window,
tucking up the collar of his great driving-coat on
the way to his rooms; it was still with me when he
passed again on his way back, and stopped to hand the
constable his key.
“We’re on his track,”
said a voice behind me. “He’s got
up on the leads, sure enough, though how he managed
it from yon window is a myst’ry to me.
We’re going to lock up here and try what like
it is from the attics. So you’d better
come with us if you’ve a mind.”
The top floor at the Albany, as elsewhere,
is devoted to the servants-a congeries
of little kitchens and cubicles, used by many as lumber-rooms-by
Raffles among the many. The annex in this case
was, of course, empty as the rooms below; and that
was lucky, for we filled it, what with the manager,
who now joined us, and another tenant whom he brought
with him to Mackenzie’s undisguised annoyance.
“Better let in all Piccadilly
at a crown a head,” said he. “Here,
my man, out you go on the roof to make one less, and
have your truncheon handy.”
We crowded to the little window, which
Mackenzie took care to fill; and a minute yielded
no sound but the crunch and slither of constabulary
boots upon sooty slates. Then came a shout.
“What now?” cried Mackenzie.
“A rope,” we heard, “hanging from
the spout by a hook!”
“Sirs,” purred Mackenzie,
“yon’s how he got up from below!
He would do it with one o’ they telescope sticks,
an’ I never thocht o’t! How long
a rope, my lad?”
“Quite short. I’ve got it.”
“Did it hang over a window?
Ask him that!” cried the manager. “He
can see by leaning over the parapet.”
The question was repeated by Mackenzie; a pause, then
“Yes, it did.”
“Ask him how many windows along!”
shouted the manager in high excitement.
“Six, he says,” said Mackenzie
next minute; and he drew in his head and shoulders.
“I should just like to see those rooms, six
windows along.”
“Mr. Raffles,” announced
the manager after a mental calculation.
“Is that a fact?” cried
Mackenzie. “Then we shall have no difficulty
at all. He’s left me his key down below.”
The words had a dry, speculative intonation,
which even then I found time to dislike; it was as
though the coincidence had already struck the Scotchman
as something more.
“Where is Mr. Raffles?”
asked the manager, as we all filed downstairs.
“He’s gone out to his dinner,” said
Mackenzie.
“Are you sure?”
“I saw him go,” said I.
My heart was beating horribly. I would not
trust myself to speak again. But I wormed my way
to a front place in the little procession, and was,
in fact, the second man to cross the threshold that
had been the Rubicon of my life. As I did so
I uttered a cry of pain, for Mackenzie had trod back
heavily on my toes; in another second I saw the reason,
and saw it with another and a louder cry.
A man was lying at full length before
the fire on his back, with a little wound in the white
forehead, and the blood draining into his eyes.
And the man was Raffles himself!
“Suicide,” said Mackenzie
calmly. “No-here’s the
poker-looks more like murder.”
He went on his knees and shook his head quite cheerfully.
“An’ it’s not even murder,”
said he, with a shade of disgust in his matter-of-fact
voice; “yon’s no more than a flesh-wound,
and I have my doubts whether it felled him; but, sirs,
he just stinks o’ chloryform!”
He got up and fixed his keen gray
eyes upon me; my own were full of tears, but they
faced him unashamed.
“I understood ye to say ye saw
him go out?” said he sternly.
“I saw that long driving-coat;
of course, I thought he was inside it.”
“And I could ha’ sworn
it was the same gent when he give me the key!”
It was the disconsolate voice of the
constable in the background; on him turned Mackenzie,
white to the lips.
“You’d think anything,
some of you damned policemen,” said he.
“What’s your number, you rotter?
P 34? You’ll be hearing more of this,
Mr. P 34! If that gentleman was dead-instead
of coming to himself while I’m talking-do
you know what you’d be? Guilty of his manslaughter,
you stuck pig in buttons! Do you know who you’ve
let slip, butter-fingers? Crawshay-no
less-him that broke Dartmoor yesterday.
By the God that made ye, P 34, if I lose him I’ll
hound ye from the forrce!”
Working face-shaking fist-a
calm man on fire. It was a new side of Mackenzie,
and one to mark and to digest. Next moment he
had flounced from our midst.
“Difficult thing to break your
own head,” said Raffles later; “infinitely
easier to cut your own throat. Chloroform’s
another matter; when you’ve used it on others,
you know the dose to a nicety. So you thought
I was really gone? Poor old Bunny! But
I hope Mackenzie saw your face?”
“He did,” said I. I would
not tell him all Mackenzie must have seen, however.
“That’s all right.
I wouldn’t have had him miss it for worlds;
and you mustn’t think me a brute, old boy, for
I fear that man, and, know, we sink or swim together.”
“And now we sink or swim with
Crawshay, too,” said I dolefully.
“Not we!” said Raffles
with conviction. “Old Crawshay’s
a true sportsman, and he’ll do by us as we’ve
done by him; besides, this makes us quits; and I don’t
think, Bunny, that we’ll take on the professors
again!”