I
When the King of the Cannibal Islands
made faces at Queen Victoria, and a European monarch
set the cables tingling with his compliments on the
exploit, the indignation in England was not less than
the surprise, for the thing was not so common as it
has since become. But when it transpired that
a gift of peculiar significance was to follow the
congratulations, to give them weight, the inference
prevailed that the white potentate and the black had
taken simultaneous leave of their fourteen senses.
For the gift was a pearl of price unparalleled, picked
aforetime by British cutlasses from a Polynesian setting,
and presented by British royalty to the sovereign
who seized this opportunity of restoring it to its
original possessor.
The incident would have been a godsend
to the Press a few weeks later. Even in June
there were leaders, letters, large headlines, leaded
type; the Daily Chronicle devoting half its literary
page to a charming drawing of the island capital which
the new Pall Mall, in a leading article headed by
a pun, advised the Government to blow to flinders.
I was myself driving a poor but not dishonest quill
at the time, and the topic of the hour goaded me into
satiric verse which obtained a better place than anything
I had yet turned out. I had let my flat in town,
and taken inexpensive quarters at Thames Ditton, on
the plea of a disinterested passion for the river.
“First-rate, old boy!”
said Raffles (who must needs come and see me there),
lying back in the boat while I sculled and steered.
“I suppose they pay you pretty well for these,
eh?”
“Not a penny.”
“Nonsense, Bunny! I thought
they paid so well? Give them time, and you’ll
get your check.”
“Oh, no, I sha’n’t,”
said I gloomily. “I’ve got to be
content with the honor of getting in; the editor wrote
to say so, in so many words,” I added.
But I gave the gentleman his distinguished name.
“You don’t mean to say
you’ve written for payment already?”
No; it was the last thing I had intended
to admit. But I had done it. The murder
was out; there was no sense in further concealment.
I had written for my money because I really needed
it; if he must know, I was cursedly hard up.
Raffles nodded as though he knew already. I
warmed to my woes. It was no easy matter to
keep your end up as a raw freelance of letters; for
my part, I was afraid I wrote neither well enough
nor ill enough for success. I suffered from a
persistent ineffectual feeling after style.
Verse I could manage; but it did not pay. To
personal paragraphs and the baser journalism I could
not and I would not stoop.
Raffles nodded again, this time with
a smile that stayed in his eyes as he leant back watching
me. I knew that he was thinking of other things
I had stooped to, and I thought I knew what he was
going to say. He had said it before so often;
he was sure to say it again. I had my answer
ready, but evidently he was tired of asking the same
question. His lids fell, he took up the paper
he had dropped, and I sculled the length of the old
red wall of Hampton Court before he spoke again.
“And they gave you nothing for
these! My dear Bunny, they’re capital,
not only qua verses but for crystallizing your subject
and putting it in a nutshell. Certainly you’ve
taught me more about it than I knew before.
But is it really worth fifty thousand pounds-a
single pearl?”
“A hundred, I believe; but that wouldn’t
scan.”
“A hundred thousand pounds!”
said Raffles, with his eyes shut. And again
I made certain what was coming, but again I was mistaken.
“If it’s worth all that,” he cried
at last, “there would be no getting rid of it
at all; it’s not like a diamond that you can
subdivide. But I beg your pardon, Bunny.
I was forgetting!”
And we said no more about the emperor’s
gift; for pride thrives on an empty pocket, and no
privation would have drawn from me the proposal which
I had expected Raffles to make. My expectation
had been half a hope, though I only knew it now.
But neither did we touch again on what Raffles professed
to have forgotten-my “apostasy,”
my “lapse into virtue,” as he had been
pleased to call it. We were both a little silent,
a little constrained, each preoccupied with his own
thoughts. It was months since we had met, and,
as I saw him off towards eleven o’clock that
Sunday night, I fancied it was for more months that
we were saying good-by.
But as we waited for the train I saw
those clear eyes peering at me under the station lamps,
and when I met their glance Raffles shook his head.
“You don’t look well on
it, Bunny,” said he. “I never did
believe in this Thames Valley. You want a change
of air.”
I wished I might get it.
“What you really want is a sea voyage.”
“And a winter at St. Moritz,
or do you recommend Cannes or Cairo? It’s
all very well, A. J., but you forget what I told you
about my funds.”
“I forget nothing. I merely
don’t want to hurt your feelings. But,
look here, a sea voyage you shall have. I want
a change myself, and you shall come with me as my
guest. We’ll spend July in the Mediterranean.”
“But you’re playing cricket-”
“Hang the cricket!”
“Well, if I thought you meant it-”
“Of course I mean it. Will you come?”
“Like a shot-if you go.”
And I shook his hand, and waved mine
in farewell, with the perfectly good-humored conviction
that I should hear no more of the matter. It
was a passing thought, no more, no less. I soon
wished it were more; that week found me wishing myself
out of England for good and all. I was making
nothing. I could but subsist on the difference
between the rent I paid for my flat and the rent at
which I had sublet it, furnished, for the season.
And the season was near its end, and creditors awaited
me in town. Was it possible to be entirely honest?
I had run no bills when I had money in my pocket, and
the more downright dishonesty seemed to me the less
ignoble.
But from Raffles, of course, I heard
nothing more; a week went by, and half another week;
then, late on the second Wednesday night, I found a
telegram from him at my lodgings, after seeking him
vainly in town, and dining with desperation at the
solitary club to which I still belonged.
“Arrange to leave Waterloo by
North German Lloyd special,” he wired, “9.25
A. M. Monday next will meet you Southampton aboard
Uhlan with tickets am writing.”
And write he did, a light-hearted
letter enough, but full of serious solicitude for
me and for my health and prospects; a letter almost
touching in the light of our past relations, in the
twilight of their complete rupture. He said
that he had booked two berths to Naples, that we were
bound for Capri, which was clearly the island of the
Lotos-eaters, that we would bask there together, “and
for a while forget.” It was a charming
letter. I had never seen Italy; the privilege
of initiation should be his. No mistake was greater
than to deem it an impossible country for the summer.
The Bay of Naples was never so divine, and he wrote
of “faery lands forlorn,” as though the
poetry sprang unbidden to his pen. To come back
to earth and prose, I might think it unpatriotic of
him to choose a German boat, but on no other line
did you receive such attention and accommodation for
your money. There was a hint of better reasons.
Raffles wrote, as he had telegraphed, from Bremen;
and I gathered that the personal use of some little
influence with the authorities there had resulted in
a material reduction in our fares.
Imagine my excitement and delight!
I managed to pay what I owed at Thames Ditton, to
squeeze a small editor for a very small check, and
my tailors for one more flannel suit. I remember
that I broke my last sovereign to get a box of Sullivan’s
cigarettes for Raffles to smoke on the voyage.
But my heart was as light as my purse on the Monday
morning, the fairest morning of an unfair summer, when
the special whirled me through the sunshine to the
sea.
A tender awaited us at Southampton.
Raffles was not on board, nor did I really look for
him till we reached the liner’s side. And
then I looked in vain. His face was not among
the many that fringed the rail; his hand was not of
the few that waved to friends. I climbed aboard
in a sudden heaviness. I had no ticket, nor
the money to pay for one. I did not even know
the number of my room. My heart was in my mouth
as I waylaid a steward and asked if a Mr. Raffles
was on board. Thank heaven-he was!
But where? The man did not know, was plainly
on some other errand, and a-hunting I must go.
But there was no sign of him on the promenade deck,
and none below in the saloon; the smoking-room was
empty but for a little German with a red moustache
twisted into his eyes; nor was Raffles in his own
cabin, whither I inquired my way in desperation, but
where the sight of his own name on the baggage was
certainly a further reassurance. Why he himself
kept in the background, however, I could not conceive,
and only sinister reasons would suggest themselves
in explanation.
“So there you are! I’ve
been looking for you all over the ship!”
Despite the graven prohibition, I
had tried the bridge as a last resort; and there,
indeed, was A. J. Raffles, seated on a skylight, and
leaning over one of the officers’ long chairs,
in which reclined a girl in a white drill coat and
skirt-a slip of a girl with a pale skin,
dark hair, and rather remarkable eyes. So much
I noted as he rose and quickly turned; thereupon I
could think of nothing but the swift grimace which
preceded a start of well-feigned astonishment.
“Why-Bunny?”
cried Raffles. “Where have you sprung
from?”
I stammered something as he pinched my hand.
“And are you coming in this
ship? And to Naples, too? Well, upon my
word! Miss Werner, may I introduce him?”
And he did so without a blush, describing
me as an old schoolfellow whom he had not seen for
months, with wilful circumstance and gratuitous detail
that filled me at once with confusion, suspicion, and
revolt. I felt myself blushing for us both, and
I did not care. My address utterly deserted
me, and I made no effort to recover it, to carry the
thing off. All I would do was to mumble such
words as Raffles actually put into my mouth, and that
I doubt not with a thoroughly evil grace.
“So you saw my name in the list
of passengers and came in search of me? Good
old Bunny; I say, though, I wish you’d share
my cabin. I’ve got a beauty on the promenade
deck, but they wouldn’t promise to keep me by
myself. We ought to see about it before they
shove in some alien. In any case we shall have
to get out of this.”
For a quartermaster had entered the
wheelhouse, and even while we had been speaking the
pilot had taken possession of the bridge; as we descended,
the tender left us with flying handkerchiefs and shrill
good-bys; and as we bowed to Miss Werner on the promenade
deck, there came a deep, slow throbbing underfoot,
and our voyage had begun.
It did not begin pleasantly between
Raffles and me. On deck he had overborne my
stubborn perplexity by dint of a forced though forceful
joviality; in his cabin the gloves were off.
“You idiot,” he snarled, “you’ve
given me away again!”
“How have I given you away?”
I ignored the separate insult in his last word.
“How? I should have thought
any clod could see that I meant us to meet by chance!”
“After taking both tickets yourself?”
“They knew nothing about that
on board; besides, I hadn’t decided when I took
the tickets.”
“Then you should have let me
know when you did decide. You lay your plans,
and never say a word, and expect me to tumble to them
by light of nature. How was I to know you had
anything on?”
I had turned the tables with some
effect. Raffles almost hung his head.
“The fact is, Bunny, I didn’t
mean you to know. You-you’ve
grown such a pious rabbit in your old age!”
My nickname and his tone went far
to mollify me, other things went farther, but I had
much to forgive him still.
“If you were afraid of writing,”
I pursued, “it was your business to give me
the tip the moment I set foot on board. I would
have taken it all right. I am not so virtuous
as all that.”
Was it my imagination, or did Raffles
look slightly ashamed? If so, it was for the
first and last time in all the years I knew him; nor
can I swear to it even now.
“That,” said he, “was
the very thing I meant to do-to lie in wait
in my room and get you as you passed. But-”
“You were better engaged?”
“Say otherwise.”
“The charming Miss Werner?”
“She is quite charming.”
“Most Australian girls are,” said I.
“How did you know she was one?” he cried.
“I heard her speak.”
“Brute!” said Raffles,
laughing; “she has no more twang than you have.
Her people are German, she has been to school in Dresden,
and is on her way out alone.”
“Money?” I inquired.
“Confound you!” he said,
and, though he was laughing, I thought it was a point
at which the subject might be changed.
“Well,” I said, “it
wasn’t for Miss Werner you wanted us to play
strangers, was it? You have some deeper game
than that, eh?”
“I suppose I have.”
“Then hadn’t you better tell me what it
is?”
Raffles treated me to the old cautious
scrutiny that I knew so well; the very familiarity
of it, after all these months, set me smiling in a
way that might have reassured him; for dimly already
I divined his enterprise.
“It won’t send you off in the pilot’s
boat, Bunny?”
“Not quite.”
“Then-you remember the pearl you
wrote the-”
I did not wait for him to finish his sentence.
“You’ve got it!”
I cried, my face on fire, for I caught sight of it
that moment in the stateroom mirror.
Raffles seemed taken aback.
“Not yet,” said he; “but I mean
to have it before we get to Naples.”
“Is it on board?”
“Yes.”
“But how-where-who’s
got it?”
“A little German officer, a
whipper-snapper with perpendicular mustaches.”
“I saw him in the smoke-room.”
“That’s the chap; he’s
always there. Herr Captain Wilhelm von Heumann,
if you look in the list. Well, he’s the
special envoy of the emperor, and he’s taking
the pearl out with him.”
“You found this out in Bremen?”
“No, in Berlin, from a newspaper
man I know there. I’m ashamed to tell
you, Bunny, that I went there on purpose!”
I burst out laughing.
“You needn’t be ashamed.
You are doing the very thing I was rather hoping
you were going to propose the other day on the river.”
“You were hoping it?”
said Raffles, with his eyes wide open. Indeed,
it was his turn to show surprise, and mine to be much
more ashamed than I felt.
“Yes,” I answered, “I
was quite keen on the idea, but I wasn’t going
to propose it.”
“Yet you would have listened to me the other
day?”
Certainly I would, and I told him
so without reserve; not brazenly, you understand;
not even now with the gusto of a man who savors such
an adventure for its own sake, but doggedly, defiantly,
through my teeth, as one who had tried to live honestly
and failed. And, while I was about it, I told
him much more. Eloquently enough, I daresay,
I gave him chapter and verse of my hopeless struggle,
my inevitable defeat; for hopeless and inevitable
they were to a man with my record, even though that
record was written only in one’s own soul.
It was the old story of the thief trying to turn
honest man; the thing was against nature, and there
was an end of it.
Raffles entirely disagreed with me.
He shook his head over my conventional view.
Human nature was a board of checkers; why not reconcile
one’s self to alternate black and white?
Why desire to be all one thing or all the other,
like our forefathers on the stage or in the old-fashioned
fiction? For his part, he enjoyed himself on
all squares of the board, and liked the light the
better for the shade. My conclusion he considered
absurd.
“But you err in good company,
Bunny, for all the cheap moralists who preach the
same twaddle: old Virgil was the first and worst
offender of you all. I back myself to climb
out of Avernus any day I like, and sooner or later
I shall climb out for good. I suppose I can’t
very well turn myself into a Limited Liability Company.
But I could retire and settle down and live blamelessly
ever after. I’m not sure that it couldn’t
be done on this pearl alone!”
“Then you don’t still think it too remarkable
to sell?”
“We might take a fishery and
haul it up with smaller fry. It would come after
months of ill luck, just as we were going to sell the
schooner; by Jove, it would be the talk of the Pacific!”
“Well, we’ve got to get
it first. Is this von What’s-his-name a
formidable cuss?”
“More so than he looks; and
he has the cheek of the devil!”
As he spoke a white drill skirt fluttered
past the open state-room door, and I caught a glimpse
of an upturned moustache beyond.
“But is he the chap we have
to deal with? Won’t the pearl be in the
purser’s keeping?”
Raffles stood at the door, frowning
out upon the Solent, but for an instant he turned
to me with a sniff.
“My good fellow, do you suppose
the whole ship’s company knows there’s
a gem like that aboard? You said that it was
worth a hundred thousand pounds; in Berlin they say
it’s priceless. I doubt if the skipper
himself knows that von Heumann has it on him.”
“And he has?”
“Must have.”
“Then we have only him to deal with?”
He answered me without a word.
Something white was fluttering past once more, and
Raffles, stepping forth, made the promenaders three.
II
I do not ask to set foot aboard a
finer steamship than the Uhlan of the Norddeutscher
Lloyd, to meet a kindlier gentleman than her commander,
or better fellows than his officers. This much
at least let me have the grace to admit. I hated
the voyage. It was no fault of anybody connected
with the ship; it was no fault of the weather, which
was monotonously ideal. Not even in my own heart
did the reason reside; conscience and I were divorced
at last, and the decree made absolute. With my
scruples had fled all fear, and I was ready to revel
between bright skies and sparkling sea with the light-hearted
detachment of Raffles himself. It was Raffles
himself who prevented me, but not Raffles alone.
It was Raffles and that Colonial minx on her way home
from school.
What he could see in her-but
that begs the question. Of course he saw no
more than I did, but to annoy me, or perhaps to punish
me for my long defection, he must turn his back on
me and devote himself to this chit from Southampton
to the Mediterranean. They were always together.
It was too absurd. After breakfast they would
begin, and go on until eleven or twelve at night;
there was no intervening hour at which you might not
hear her nasal laugh, or his quiet voice talking soft
nonsense into her ear. Of course it was nonsense!
Is it conceivable that a man like Raffles, with his
knowledge of the world, and his experience of women
(a side of his character upon which I have purposely
never touched, for it deserves another volume); is
it credible, I ask, that such a man could find anything
but nonsense to talk by the day together to a giddy
young schoolgirl? I would not be unfair for the
world.
I think I have admitted that the young
person had points. Her eyes, I suppose, were
really fine, and certainly the shape of the little
brown face was charming, so far as mere contour can
charm.
I admit also more audacity than I
cared about, with enviable health, mettle, and vitality.
I may not have occasion to report any of this young
lady’s speeches (they would scarcely bear it),
and am therefore the more anxious to describe her
without injustice. I confess to some little prejudice
against her. I resented her success with Raffles,
of whom, in consequence, I saw less and less each
day. It is a mean thing to have to confess,
but there must have been something not unlike jealousy
rankling within me.
Jealousy there was in another quarter-crude,
rampant, undignified jealousy. Captain von Heumann
would twirl his mustaches into twin spires, shoot
his white cuffs over his rings, and stare at me insolently
through his rimless eyeglasses; we ought to have consoled
each other, but we never exchanged a syllable.
The captain had a murderous scar across one of his
cheeks, a present from Heidelberg, and I used to think
how he must long to have Raffles there to serve the
same. It was not as though von Heumann never
had his innings. Raffles let him go in several
times a day, for the malicious pleasure of bowling
him out as he was “getting set”; those
were his words when I taxed him disingenuously with
obnoxious conduct towards a German on a German boat.
“You’ll make yourself disliked on board!”
“By von Heumann merely.”
“But is that wise when he’s the man we’ve
got to diddle?”
“The wisest thing I ever did.
To have chummed up with him would have been fatal-the
common dodge.”
I was consoled, encouraged, almost
content. I had feared Raffles was neglecting
things, and I told him so in a burst. Here we
were near Gibraltar, and not a word since the Solent.
He shook his head with a smile.
“Plenty of time, Bunny, plenty
of time. We can do nothing before we get to
Genoa, and that won’t be till Sunday night.
The voyage is still young, and so are we; let’s
make the most of things while we can.”
It was after dinner on the promenade
deck, and as Raffles spoke he glanced sharply fore
and aft, leaving me next moment with a step full of
purpose. I retired to the smoking-room, to smoke
and read in a corner, and to watch von Heumann, who
very soon came to drink beer and to sulk in another.
Few travellers tempt the Red Sea at
midsummer; the Uhlan was very empty indeed.
She had, however, but a limited supply of cabins on
the promenade deck, and there was just that excuse
for my sharing Raffles’s room. I could
have had one to myself downstairs, but I must be up
above. Raffles had insisted that I should insist
on the point. So we were together, I think, without
suspicion, though also without any object that I could
see.
On the Sunday afternoon I was asleep
in my berth, the lower one, when the curtains were
shaken by Raffles, who was in his shirt-sleeves on
the settee.
“Achilles sulking in his bunk!”
“What else is there to do?”
I asked him as I stretched and yawned. I noted,
however, the good-humor of his tone, and did my best
to catch it.
“I have found something else, Bunny.”
“I daresay!”
“You misunderstand me.
The whipper-snapper’s making his century this
afternoon. I’ve had other fish to fry.”
I swung my legs over the side of my
berth and sat forward, as he was sitting, all attention.
The inner door, a grating, was shut and bolted, and
curtained like the open porthole.
“We shall be at Genoa before
sunset,” continued Raffles. “It’s
the place where the deed’s got to be done.”
“So you still mean to do it?”
“Did I ever say I didn’t?”
“You have said so little either way.”
“Advisedly so, my dear Bunny;
why spoil a pleasure trip by talking unnecessary shop?
But now the time has come. It must be done at
Genoa or not at all.”
“On land?”
“No, on board, to-morrow night.
To-night would do, but to-morrow is better, in case
of mishap. If we were forced to use violence
we could get away by the earliest train, and nothing
be known till the ship was sailing and von Heumann
found dead or drugged-”
“Not dead!” I exclaimed.
“Of course not,” assented
Raffles, “or there would be no need for us to
bolt; but if we should have to bolt, Tuesday morning
is our time, when this ship has got to sail, whatever
happens. But I don’t anticipate any violence.
Violence is a confession of terrible incompetence.
In all these years how many blows have you known
me to strike? Not one, I believe; but I have
been quite ready to kill my man every time, if the
worst came to the worst.”
I asked him how he proposed to enter
von Heumann’s state-room unobserved, and even
through the curtained gloom of ours his face lighted
up.
“Climb into my bunk, Bunny, and you shall see.”
I did so, but could see nothing.
Raffles reached across me and tapped the ventilator,
a sort of trapdoor in the wall above his bed, some
eighteen inches long and half that height. It
opened outwards into the ventilating shaft.
“That,” said he, “is
our door to fortune. Open it if you like; you
won’t see much, because it doesn’t open
far; but loosening a couple of screws will set that
all right. The shaft, as you may see, is more
or less bottomless; you pass under it whenever you
go to your bath, and the top is a skylight on the
bridge. That’s why this thing has to be
done while we’re at Genoa, because they keep
no watch on the bridge in port. The ventilator
opposite ours is von Heumann’s. It again
will only mean a couple of screws, and there’s
a beam to stand on while you work.”
“But if anybody should look up from below?”
“It’s extremely unlikely
that anybody will be astir below, so unlikely that
we can afford to chance it. No, I can’t
have you there to make sure. The great point
is that neither of us should be seen from the time
we turn in. A couple of ship’s boys do
sentry-go on these decks, and they shall be our witnesses;
by Jove, it’ll be the biggest mystery that ever
was made!”
“If von Heumann doesn’t resist.”
“Resist! He won’t
get the chance. He drinks too much beer to sleep
light, and nothing is so easy as to chloroform a heavy
sleeper; you’ve even done it yourself on an
occasion of which it’s perhaps unfair to remind
you. Von Heumann will be past sensation almost
as soon as I get my hand through his ventilator.
I shall crawl in over his body, Bunny, my boy!”
“And I?”
“You will hand me what I want
and hold the fort in case of accidents, and generally
lend me the moral support you’ve made me require.
It’s a luxury, Bunny, but I found it devilish
difficult to do without it after you turned pi!”
He said that Von Heumann was certain
to sleep with a bolted door, which he, of course,
would leave unbolted, and spoke of other ways of laying
a false scent while rifling the cabin. Not that
Raffles anticipated a tiresome search. The pearl
would be about von Heumann’s person; in fact,
Raffles knew exactly where and in what he kept it.
Naturally I asked how he could have come by such knowledge,
and his answer led up to a momentary unpleasantness.
“It’s a very old story,
Bunny. I really forget in what Book it comes;
I’m only sure of the Testament. But Samson
was the unlucky hero, and one Delilah the heroine.”
And he looked so knowing that I could
not be in a moment’s doubt as to his meaning.
“So the fair Australian has
been playing Delilah?” said I.
“In a very harmless, innocent sort of way.”
“She got his mission out of him?”
“Yes, I’ve forced him
to score all the points he could, and that was his
great stroke, as I hoped it would be. He has
even shown Amy the pearl.”
“Amy, eh! and she promptly told you?”
“Nothing of the kind.
What makes you think so? I had the greatest
trouble in getting it out of her.”
His tone should have been a sufficient
warning to me. I had not the tact to take it
as such. At last I knew the meaning of his furious
flirtation, and stood wagging my head and shaking my
finger, blinded to his frowns by my own enlightenment.
“Wily worm!” said I.
“Now I see through it all; how dense I’ve
been!”
“Sure you’re not still?”
“No; now I understand what has
beaten me all the week. I simply couldn’t
fathom what you saw in that little girl. I never
dreamt it was part of the game.”
“So you think it was that and nothing more?”
“You deep old dog-of course I do!”
“You didn’t know she was the daughter
of a wealthy squatter?”
“There are wealthy women by the dozen who would
marry you to-morrow.”
“It doesn’t occur to you
that I might like to draw stumps, start clean, and
live happily ever after-in the bush?”
“With that voice? It certainly does not!”
“Bunny!” he cried, so fiercely that I
braced myself for a blow.
But no more followed.
“Do you think you would live happily?”
I made bold to ask him.
“God knows!” he answered.
And with that he left me, to marvel at his look and
tone, and, more than ever, at the insufficiently exciting
cause.
III
Of all the mere feats of cracksmanship
which I have seen Raffles perform, at once the most
delicate and most difficult was that which he accomplished
between one and two o’clock on the Tuesday morning,
aboard the North German steamer Uhlan, lying at anchor
in Genoa harbor.
Not a hitch occurred. Everything
had been foreseen; everything happened as I had been
assured everything must. Nobody was about below,
only the ship’s boys on deck, and nobody on the
bridge. It was twenty-five minutes past one
when Raffles, without a stitch of clothing on his
body, but with a glass phial, corked with cotton-wool,
between his teeth, and a tiny screw-driver behind
his ear, squirmed feet first through the ventilator
over his berth; and it was nineteen minutes to two
when he returned, head first, with the phial still
between his teeth, and the cotton-wool rammed home
to still the rattling of that which lay like a great
gray bean within. He had taken screws out and
put them in again; he had unfastened von Heumann’s
ventilator and had left it fast as he had found it-fast
as he instantly proceeded to make his own. As
for von Heumann, it had been enough to place the drenched
wad first on his mustache, and then to hold it between
his gaping lips; thereafter the intruder had climbed
both ways across his shins without eliciting a groan.
And here was the prize-this
pearl as large as a filbert-with a pale
pink tinge like a lady’s fingernail-this
spoil of a filibustering age-this gift
from a European emperor to a South Sea chief.
We gloated over it when all was snug. We toasted
it in whiskey and soda-water laid in overnight in
view of the great moment. But the moment was
greater, more triumphant, than our most sanguine dreams.
All we had now to do was to secrete the gem (which
Raffles had prised from its setting, replacing
the latter), so that we could stand the strictest
search and yet take it ashore with us at Naples; and
this Raffles was doing when I turned in. I myself
would have landed incontinently, that night, at Genoa
and bolted with the spoil; he would not hear of it,
for a dozen good reasons which will be obvious.
On the whole I do not think that anything
was discovered or suspected before we weighed anchor;
but I cannot be sure. It is difficult to believe
that a man could be chloroformed in his sleep and feel
no tell-tale effects, sniff no suspicious odor, in
the morning. Nevertheless, von Heumann reappeared
as though nothing had happened to him, his German
cap over his eyes and his mustaches brushing the peak.
And by ten o’clock we were quit of Genoa; the
last lean, blue-chinned official had left our decks;
the last fruitseller had been beaten off with bucketsful
of water and left cursing us from his boat; the last
passenger had come aboard at the last moment-a
fussy graybeard who kept the big ship waiting while
he haggled with his boatman over half a lira.
But at length we were off, the tug was shed, the lighthouse
passed, and Raffles and I leaned together over the
rail, watching our shadows on the pale green, liquid,
veined marble that again washed the vessel’s
side.
Von Heumann was having his innings
once more; it was part of the design that he should
remain in all day, and so postpone the inevitable hour;
and, though the lady looked bored, and was for ever
glancing in our direction, he seemed only too willing
to avail himself of his opportunities. But Raffles
was moody and ill-at-ease. He had not the air
of a successful man. I could but opine that the
impending parting at Naples sat heavily on his spirit.
He would neither talk to me, nor would he let me go.
“Stop where you are, Bunny. I’ve
things to tell you. Can you swim?”
“A bit.”
“Ten miles?”
“Ten?” I burst out laughing. “Not
one! Why do you ask?”
“We shall be within a ten miles’ swim
of the shore most of the day.”
“What on earth are you driving at, Raffles?”
“Nothing; only I shall swim
for it if the worst comes to the worst. I suppose
you can’t swim under water at all?”
I did not answer his question.
I scarcely heard it: cold beads were bursting
through my skin.
“Why should the worst come to
the worst?” I whispered. “We aren’t
found out, are we?”
“No.”
“Then why speak as though we were?”
“We may be; an old enemy of ours is on board.”
“An old enemy?”
“Mackenzie.”
“Never!”
“The man with the beard who came aboard last.”
“Are you sure?”
“Sure! I was only sorry to see you didn’t
recognize him too.”
I took my handkerchief to my face;
now that I thought of it, there had been something
familiar in the old man’s gait, as well as something
rather youthful for his apparent years; his very beard
seemed unconvincing, now that I recalled it in the
light of this horrible revelation. I looked
up and down the deck, but the old man was nowhere
to be seen.
“That’s the worst of it,”
said Raffles. “I saw him go into the captain’s
cabin twenty minutes ago.”
“But what can have brought him?”
I cried miserably. “Can it be a coincidence-is
it somebody else he’s after?”
Raffles shook his head.
“Hardly this time.”
“Then you think he’s after you?”
“I’ve been afraid of it for some weeks.”
“Yet there you stand!”
“What am I to do? I don’t
want to swim for it before I must. I begin to
wish I’d taken your advice, Bunny, and left the
ship at Genoa. But I’ve not the smallest
doubt that Mac was watching both ship and station
till the last moment. That’s why he ran
it so fine.”
He took a cigarette and handed me
the case, but I shook my head impatiently.
“I still don’t understand,”
said I. “Why should he be after you?
He couldn’t come all this way about a jewel
which was perfectly safe for all he knew. What’s
your own theory?”
“Simply that he’s been
on my track for some time, probably ever since friend
Crawshay slipped clean through his fingers last November.
There have been other indications. I am really
not unprepared for this. But it can only be
pure suspicion. I’ll defy him to bring
anything home, and I’ll defy him to find the
pearl! Theory, my dear Bunny? I know how
he’s got here as well as though I’d been
inside that Scotchman’s skin, and I know what
he’ll do next. He found out I’d gone
abroad, and looked for a motive; he found out about
von Heumann and his mission, and there was his motive
cut-and-dried. Great chance-to nab
me on a new job altogether. But he won’t
do it, Bunny; mark my words, he’ll search the
ship and search us all, when the loss is known; but
he’ll search in vain. And there’s
the skipper beckoning the whippersnapper to his cabin:
the fat will be in the fire in five minutes!”
Yet there was no conflagration, no
fuss, no searching of the passengers, no whisper of
what had happened in the air; instead of a stir there
was portentous peace; and it was clear to me that Raffles
was not a little disturbed at the falsification of
all his predictions. There was something sinister
in silence under such a loss, and the silence was
sustained for hours during which Mackenzie never reappeared.
But he was abroad during the luncheon-hour-he
was in our cabin! I had left my book in Raffles’s
berth, and in taking it after lunch I touched the
quilt. It was warm from the recent pressure of
flesh and blood, and on an instinct I sprang to the
ventilator; as I opened it the ventilator opposite
was closed with a snap.
I waylaid Raffles. “All
right! Let him find the pearl.”
“Have you dumped it overboard?”
“That’s a question I shan’t condescend
to answer.”
He turned on his heel, and at subsequent
intervals I saw him making the most of his last afternoon
with the inevitable Miss Werner. I remember
that she looked both cool and smart in quite a simple
affair of brown holland, which toned well with her
complexion, and was cleverly relieved with touches
of scarlet. I quite admired her that afternoon,
for her eyes were really very good, and so were her
teeth, yet I had never admired her more directly in
my own despite. For I passed them again and
again in order to get a word with Raffles, to tell
him I knew there was danger in the wind; but he would
not so much as catch my eye. So at last I gave
it up. And I saw him next in the captain’s
cabin.
They had summoned him first; he had
gone in smiling; and smiling I found him when they
summoned me. The state-room was spacious, as
befitted that of a commander. Mackenzie sat on
the settee, his beard in front of him on the polished
table; but a revolver lay in front of the captain;
and, when I had entered, the chief officer, who had
summoned me, shut the door and put his back to it.
Von Heumann completed the party, his fingers busy
with his mustache.
Raffles greeted me.
“This is a great joke!”
he cried. “You remember the pearl you were
so keen about, Bunny, the emperor’s pearl, the
pearl money wouldn’t buy? It seems it was
entrusted to our little friend here, to take out to
Canoodle Dum, and the poor little chap’s
gone and lost it; ergo, as we’re Britishers,
they think we’ve got it!”
“But I know ye have,”
put in Mackenzie, nodding to his beard.
“You will recognize that loyal
and patriotic voice,” said Raffles. “Mon,
‘tis our auld acquaintance Mackenzie, o’
Scoteland Yarrd an’ Scoteland itsel’!”
“Dat is enough,” cried
the captain. “Have you submid to be searge,
or do I vorce you?”
“What you will,” said
Raffles, “but it will do you no harm to give
us fair play first. You accuse us of breaking
into Captain von Heumann’s state-room during
the small hours of this morning, and abstracting from
it this confounded pearl. Well, I can prove that
I was in my own room all night long, and I have no
doubt my friend can prove the same.”
“Most certainly I can,”
said I indignantly. “The ship’s boys
can bear witness to that.”
Mackenzie laughed, and shook his head
at his reflection in the polished mahogany.
“That was ver clever,”
said he, “and like enough it would ha’
served ye had I not stepped aboard. But I’ve
just had a look at they ventilators, and I think I
know how ye worrked it. Anyway, captain, it
makes no matter. I’ll just be clappin’
the derbies on these young sparks, an’ then-”
“By what right?” roared
Raffles, in a ringing voice, and I never saw his face
in such a blaze. “Search us if you like;
search every scrap and stitch we possess; but you
dare to lay a finger on us without a warrant!”
“I wouldna’ dare,”
said Mackenzie, as he fumbled in his breast pocket,
and Raffles dived his hand into his own. “Haud
his wrist!” shouted the Scotchman; and the huge
Colt that had been with us many a night, but had never
been fired in my hearing, clattered on the table and
was raked in by the captain.
“All right,” said Raffles
savagely to the mate. “You can let go now.
I won’t try it again. Now, Mackenzie,
let’s see your warrant!”
“Ye’ll no mishandle it?”
“What good would that do me?
Let me see it,” said Raffles, peremptorily,
and the detective obeyed. Raffles raised his
eyebrows as he perused the document; his mouth hardened,
but suddenly relaxed; and it was with a smile and
a shrug that he returned the paper.
“Wull that do for ye?” inquired Mackenzie.
“It may. I congratulate
you, Mackenzie; it’s a strong hand, at any rate.
Two burglaries and the Melrose necklace, Bunny!”
And he turned to me with a rueful smile.
“An’ all easy to prove,”
said the Scotchman, pocketing the warrant. “I’ve
one o’ these for you,” he added, nodding
to me, “only not such a long one.”
“To think,” said the captain
reproachfully, “that my shib should be made
a den of thiefs! It shall be a very disagreeable
madder, I have been obliged to pud you both in irons
until we get to Nables.”
“Surely not!” exclaimed
Raffles. “Mackenzie, intercede with him;
don’t give your countrymen away before all hands!
Captain, we can’t escape; surely you could
hush it up for the night? Look here, here’s
everything I have in my pockets; you empty yours, too,
Bunny, and they shall strip us stark if they suspect
we’ve weapons up our sleeves. All I ask
is that we are allowed to get out of this without gyves
upon our wrists!”
“Webbons you may not have,”
said the captain; “but wad aboud der bearl
dat you were sdealing?”
“You shall have it!” cried
Raffles. “You shall have it this minute
if you guarantee no public indignity on board!”
“That I’ll see to,”
said Mackenzie, “as long as you behave yourselves.
There now, where is’t?”
“On the table under your nose.”
My eyes fell with the rest, but no
pearl was there; only the contents of our pockets-our
watches, pocket-books, pencils, penknives, cigarette
cases-lay on the shiny table along with
the revolvers already mentioned.
“Ye’re humbuggin’ us,” said
Mackenzie. “What’s the use?”
“I’m doing nothing of
the sort,” laughed Raffles. “I’m
testing you. Where’s the harm?”
“It’s here, joke apart?”
“On that table, by all my gods.”
Mackenzie opened the cigarette cases
and shook each particular cigarette. Thereupon
Raffles prayed to be allowed to smoke one, and, when
his prayer was heard, observed that the pearl had been
on the table much longer than the cigarettes.
Mackenzie promptly caught up the Colt and opened
the chamber in the butt.
“Not there, not there,”
said Raffles; “but you’re getting hot.
Try the cartridges.”
Mackenzie emptied them into his palm,
and shook each one at his ear without result.
“Oh, give them to me!”
And, in an instant, Raffles had found
the right one, had bitten out the bullet, and placed
the emperor’s pearl with a flourish in the centre
of the table.
“After that you will perhaps
show me such little consideration as is in your power.
Captain, I have been a bit of a villain, as you see,
and as such I am ready and willing to lie in irons
all night if you deem it requisite for the safety
of the ship. All I ask is that you do me one
favor first.”
“That shall debend on wad der vafour has
been.”
“Captain, I’ve done a
worse thing aboard your ship than any of you know.
I have become engaged to be married, and I want to
say good-by!”
I suppose we were all equally amazed;
but the only one to express his amazement was von
Heumann, whose deep-chested German oath was almost
his first contribution to the proceedings. He
was not slow to follow it, however, with a vigorous
protest against the proposed farewell; but he was
overruled, and the masterful prisoner had his way.
He was to have five minutes with the girl, while the
captain and Mackenzie stood within range (but not
earshot), with their revolvers behind their backs.
As we were moving from the cabin, in a body, he stopped
and gripped my hand.
“So I ’ve let you
in at last, Bunny-at last and after all!
If you knew how sorry I am.... But you won’t
get much-I don’t see why you should
get anything at all. Can you forgive me?
This may be for years, and it may be for ever, you
know! You were a good pal always when it came
to the scratch; some day or other you mayn’t
be so sorry to remember you were a good pal at the
last!”
There was a meaning in his eye that
I understood; and my teeth were set, and my nerve
strung ready, as I wrung that strong and cunning hand
for the last time in my life.
How that last scene stays with me,
and will stay to my death! How I see every detail,
every shadow on the sunlit deck! We were among
the islands that dot the course from Genoa to Naples;
that was Elba falling back on our starboard quarter,
that purple patch with the hot sun setting over it.
The captain’s cabin opened to starboard, and
the starboard promenade deck, sheeted with sunshine
and scored with shadow, was deserted, but for the
group of which I was one, and for the pale, slim,
brown figure further aft with Raffles. Engaged?
I could not believe it, cannot to this day.
Yet there they stood together, and we did not hear
a word; there they stood out against the sunset, and
the long, dazzling highway of sunlit sea that sparkled
from Elba to the Uhlan’s plates; and their shadows
reached almost to our feet.
Suddenly-an instant-and
the thing was done-a thing I have never
known whether to admire or to detest. He caught
her-he kissed her before us all-then
flung her from him so that she almost fell. It
was that action which foretold the next. The
mate sprang after him, and I sprang after the mate.
Raffles was on the rail, but only just.
“Hold him, Bunny!” he cried. “Hold
him tight!”
And, as I obeyed that last behest
with all my might, without a thought of what I was
doing, save that he bade me do it, I saw his hands
shoot up and his head bob down, and his lithe, spare
body cut the sunset as cleanly and precisely as though
he had plunged at his leisure from a diver’s
board!
Of what followed on deck I can tell
you nothing, for I was not there. Nor can my
final punishment, my long imprisonment, my everlasting
disgrace, concern or profit you, beyond the interest
and advantage to be gleaned from the knowledge that
I at least had my deserts. But one thing I must
set down, believe it who will-one more thing
only and I am done.
It was into a second-class cabin,
on the starboard side, that I was promptly thrust
in irons, and the door locked upon me as though I were
another Raffles. Meanwhile a boat was lowered,
and the sea scoured to no purpose, as is doubtless
on record elsewhere. But either the setting
sun, flashing over the waves, must have blinded all
eyes, or else mine were victims of a strange illusion.
For the boat was back, the screw throbbing,
and the prisoner peering through his porthole across
the sunlit waters that he believed had closed for
ever over his comrade’s head. Suddenly
the sun sank behind the Island of Elba, the lane of
dancing sunlight was instantaneously quenched and
swallowed in the trackless waste, and in the middle
distance, already miles astern, either my sight deceived
me or a black speck bobbed amid the gray. The
bugle had blown for dinner: it may well be that
all save myself had ceased to strain an eye. And
now I lost what I had found, now it rose, now sank,
and now I gave it up utterly. Yet anon it would
rise again, a mere mote dancing in the dim gray distance,
drifting towards a purple island, beneath a fading
western sky, streaked with dead gold and cerise.
And night fell before I knew whether it was a human
head or not.