BIRDS OF PREY.
Travellers in Mayfair will have noticed
that every here and there old-fashioned, snug looking
hostelries exist in out-of-the-way places at the corner of a mews, in a private street, where
they do not seem to belong; and they are generally
kept by ex-butlers, who have taken wives, joined their
savings, and gone into business with the brewers’
help.
In the parlour of the “Four-in-Hand,”
Lower Maybush street, a party of gentlemen’s
servants were playing bagatelle upon a bad board in
a very smoky atmosphere, while a knot of three men
sat at one of the old, narrow, battered mahogany tables
in a corner, drinking cold gin and water, and smoking
bad cigars.
One was a little sharp-eyed, round-headed
man, smartly dressed, and evidently rather proud of
a large gilt pin in his figured silk tie.Another
was tall and not ill-looking; he might have been a
valet, for there was a certain imitation gentility
about his cut a valet whose master had
been rather addicted to the turf, and this had been
reflected on his man to the extent of trousers rather
too tight, short hair, and a horseshoe pin with pearl
nails.The third was rather a shabby-looking
man of forty, undoubtedly a gentleman’s servant
out of place, carrying the sign in the front of the
reason why, in the shape of a nose unduly ripened
by being bathed in glasses of alcoholic drink.
“Knew him how long, did you
say?” said the tall man, tapping his chin with
an ivory-handled rattan-cane.
“Ten years, poor chap,”
said the ex-servant.“It was very horrid.”
“Here, never mind that,”
said the brisk little man.“We don’t
want horrors.Touch the bell, Dick.Come,
old fellow, sip up your lotion, and we’ll have
them filled again.That cigar don’t draw.Try one of these.Here! three fours of gin
cold,” he cried to the landlord, and as soon
as the glasses were refilled, and cigars lighted, the
conversation went on, to the accompaniment of rattling
balls and laughter from the bagatelle players.
“Well,” said the tall
man, in a low voice, “you can do as you like,
my lad, but I should have thought that, hard up as
you are, and I should say without much chance of getting
another crib say at present you’d
have been glad to earn a honest quid or two.”
The shabby-looking man shook his head.
“Here, you’re always putting
on the pace too much, Dick,” said the little
man.“A fellow wants a little time.He’s on, you see if he isn’t.My
respects to you, Mr Barnes.Hah! nice flavoured
drop of gin that.”
“You see, you know the house
well,” continued the tall man.“Often
been, of course?”
“Oh, yes; had many a glass of
wine there, when poor Charles was alive.”
“Rather a bit of mystery, that,”
said the little man.“I put that and that
together, and I set it down that he was trying the
job on his own account, and muffed it.”
The shabby man shuddered, and took
a hearty draught of his gin and water.
“There would be only us three
in the game,” said the tall man softly, “and
it would be share and share alike.Why, if we
worked it right, it would set you up.Might
take a pub on it.”
“Eh?” said the shabby man.
“I say you might take a pub and
drink yourself to death,” was added aside.
The little man winked at his tall
companion, unobserved by the other, who looked dreamy.
“Bars at all the lower windows, eh?”
“Yes, yes.You couldn’t get in there,”
was the quick reply.
“More ways of killing a cat
than by hanging it.Look here, my lads, there’s
a stable to let in the mews at the back.”
The shabby man looked up quickly.
“I had a look at it to-day.Any one could easily get to that window looking on
the leads.”
“But that’s the window where ”
“Well, dead men tell no tales,
and they don’t get in the way.That’s
the place.”
“Oh, no,” said the shabby man.
“Bah! you’re not afraid.I tell you it would be as easy as easy.You
can give me a plan of the place, and all about it,
and why, it’s child’s play,
my lad, and won’t hurt anybody.Take everything
out of that stable, and have a cart in the coach-house.I say touch that bell again, old man you
are not going to let a fortune slip through your fingers,
I know.”
The three occupants of the corner
soon after rose to go, halting half-way down the street,
where the tall man said:
“There’s half a sovereign
to keep the cold out till then.Twelve o’clock,
mind, punctual.”
The shabby man slouched away, while
the little fellow rubbed his hands.
“There’s half a ton of it there,”
he whispered.
“Think he’ll stand to it?”
“No fear, now we’ve got
him over his fright.By jingo, I’m only
afraid of one thing.”
“What’s that?”
“That some one else will be on the job.”