The cat, with its fore-paws tucked
beneath it, was dozing on the counter. Business
had been slack that morning, and it had only been
pushed off three times. It had staked out a claim
on that counter some five years before, and if anything
was required to convince it of the value of the possession
it was the fact that it was being constantly pushed
off. To a firm-minded cat this alone gave the
counter a value difficult to overestimate, and sometimes
an obsequious customer fell into raptures over its
beauty. This was soothing, and the animal allowed
customers of this type to scratch it gently behind
the ear.
The cat was for the time the only
occupant of the shop. The assistant was out,
and the pawnbroker sat in the small room beyond, with
the door half open, reading a newspaper. He had
read the financial columns, glanced at the foreign
intelligence, and was just about to turn to the leader
when his eye was caught by the headline, “Murder
in White-chapel.”
He folded the paper back, and, with
a chilly feeling creeping over him, perused the account.
In the usual thrilling style it recorded the finding
of the body of a man, evidently a sailor, behind a
hoarding placed in front of some shops in course of
erection. There was no clue to the victim, who
had evidently been stabbed from behind in the street,
and then dragged or carried to the place in which the
body had been discovered.
The pockets had been emptied, and
the police who regarded the crime as an ordinary one
of murder and robbery, entertained the usual hopes
of shortly arresting the assassins.
The pawnbroker put the paper down,
and drummed on the table with his fingers. The
description of the body left no room for doubt that
the victim of the tragedy and the man who had sold
him the diamond were identical. He began to realize
the responsibilities of the bargain, and the daring
of his visitor of the day before, in venturing before
him almost red-handed, gave him an unpleasant idea
of the lengths to which he was prepared to go.
In a pleasanter direction it gave him another idea;
it was strong confirmation of Levi’s valuation
of the stone.
“I shall see my friend again,”
said the Jew to himself, as he looked up from the
paper. “Let him make an attempt on me and
we’ll see.”
He threw the paper down, and, settling
back in his chair, fell into a pleasing reverie.
He saw his release from sordid toil close at hand.
He would travel and enjoy his life. Pity the diamond
hadn’t come twenty years before. As for
the sailor, well, poor fellow, why didn’t he
stay when he was asked?
The cat, still dozing, became aware
of a strong strange odor. In a lazy fashion it
opened one eye, and discovered that an old, shrivelled
up little man, with a brown face, was standing by
the counter. It watched him lazily, but warily,
out of a half-closed eye, and then, finding that he
appeared to be quite harmless, closed it again.
The intruder was not an impatient
type of customer. He stood for some time gazing
round him; then a thought struck him, and he approached
the cat and stroked it with a masterly hand.
Never, in the course of its life, had the animal met
such a born stroker. Every touch was a caress,
and a gentle thrum, thrum rose from its interior in
response.
Something went wrong with the stroker.
He hurt. The cat started up suddenly and jumped
behind the counter. The dark gentleman smiled
an evil smile, and, after waiting a little longer,
tapped on the counter.
The pawnbroker came from the little
room beyond, with the newspaper in his hand, and his
brow darkened as he saw the customer. He was of
a harsh and dominant nature, and he foresaw more distasteful
threats.
“Well, what do you want?” he demanded
abruptly.
“Morning, sir,” said the brown man in
perfect English; “fine day.”
“The day’s well enough,” said the
Jew.
“I want a little talk with you,”
said the other suavely, “a little, quiet, reasonable
talk.”
“You’d better make it short,” said
the Jew. “My time is valuable.”
The brown man smiled, and raised his
hand with a deprecatory gesture. “Many
things are valuable,” said he, “but time
is the most valuable of all. And time to us means
life.”
The Jew saw the covert threat, and grew more irritable
still.
“Get to your business,” he said sharply.
The brown man leant on the counter,
and regarded him with a pair of fierce, brown eyes,
which age had not dimmed.
“You are a reasonable man,”
he said slowly, “a good merchant. I can
see it. But sometimes a good merchant makes a
bad bargain. In that case what does the good
merchant do?”
“Get out of here,” said the Jew angrily.
“He makes the best of it,”
continued the other calmly, “and he is a lucky
man if he is not too late to repair the mischief. You
are not too late.”
The Jew laughed boisterously.
“There was a sailor once made
a bad bargain,” said the brown man, still in
the same even tones, “and he died of
grief.”
He grinned at this pleasantry until
his face looked like a cracked mask.
“I read in this paper of a sailor
being killed,” said the Jew, holding it up.
“Have you ever heard of the police, of prison,
and of the hangman?”
“All of them,” said the other softly.
“I might be able to put the
hangman on the track of the sailor’s murderer,”
continued the Jew grimly.
The brown man smiled and shook his
head. “You are too good a merchant,”
he said; “besides, it would be very difficult.”
“It would be a pleasure to me,” said the
Jew.
“Let us talk business like men,
not nonsense like children,” said the brown
man suddenly. “You talk of hangmen.
I talk of death. Well, listen. Two nights
ago you bought a diamond from a sailor for five hundred
pounds. Unless you give me that diamond back for
the same money I will kill you.”
“What?” snarled the Jew,
drawing his gaunt figure to its full height.
“You, you miserable mummy?”
“I will kill you,” repeated
the brown man calmly. “I will send death
to you death in a horrible shape.
I will send a devil, a little artful, teasing devil,
to worry you and kill you. In the darkness he
will come and spring out on you. You had better
give back the diamond, and live. If you give
it back I promise you your life.”
He paused, and the Jew noticed that
his face had changed, and in place of the sardonic
good-humor which had before possessed it, was now
distorted by a devilish malice. His eyes gleamed
coldly, and he snapped them quickly as he spoke.
“Well, what do you say?” he demanded.
“This,” said the Jew.
He leant over the counter, and, taking
the brown man’s skinny throat in his great hand,
flung him reeling back to the partition, which shook
with his weight. Then he burst into a laugh as
the being who had just been threatening him with a
terrible and mysterious death changed into a little
weak old man, coughing and spitting as he clutched
at his throat and fought for breath.
“What about your servant, the devil?”
asked the Jew maliciously.
“He serves when I am absent,”
said the brown man faintly. “Even now I
give you one more chance. I will let you see the
young fellow in your shop die first. But no,
he has not offended. I will kill ”
He paused, and his eye fell on the
cat, which at that moment sprang up and took its old
place on the counter. “I will kill your
cat,” said the brown man. “I will
send the devil to worry it. Watch the cat, and
as its death is so shall yours be unless ”
“Unless?” said the Jew, regarding him
mockingly.
“Unless to-night before ten
o’clock you mark on your door-post two crosses
in chalk,” said the other. “Do that
and live. Watch your cat.”
He pointed his lean, brown finger
at the animal, and, still feeling at his throat, stepped
softly to the door and passed out.
With the entrance of other customers,
the pawnbroker forgot the annoyance to which he had
been subjected, and attended to their wants in a spirit
made liberal by the near prospect of fortune.
It was certain that the stone must be of great value.
With that and the money he had made by his business,
he would give up work and settle down to a life of
pleasant ease. So liberal was he that an elderly
Irishwoman forgot their slight differences in creeds
and blessed him fervently with all the saints in the
calendar.
His assistant being back in his place
in the shop, the pawnbroker returned to the little
sitting-room, and once more carefully looked through
the account of the sailor’s murder. Then
he sat still trying to work out a problem; to hand
the murderers over to the police without his connection
with the stolen diamond being made public, and after
considerable deliberation, convinced himself that the
feat was impossible. He was interrupted by a
slight scuffling noise in the shop, and the cat came
bolting into the room, and, after running round the
table, went out at the door and fled upstairs.
The assistant came into the room.
“What are you worrying the thing
for?” demanded his master.
“I’m not worrying it,”
said the assistant in an aggrieved voice. “It’s
been moving about up and down the shop, and then it
suddenly started like that. It’s got a
fit, I suppose.”
He went back to the shop, and the
Jew sat in his chair half ashamed of his nervous credulity,
listening to the animal, which was rushing about in
the rooms upstairs.
“Go and see what’s the
matter with the thing, Bob,” he cried.
The assistant obeyed, returning hastily
in a minute or two, and closing the door behind him.
“Well, what’s the matter?” demanded
his master.
“The brute’s gone mad,”
said the assistant, whose face was white. “It’s
flying about upstairs like a wild thing. Mind
it don’t get in, it’s as bad as a mad
dog.”
“Oh, rubbish,” said the Jew. “Cats
are often like that.”
“Well, I’ve never seen
one like it before,” said the other, “and,
what’s more, I’m not going to see that
again.”
The animal came downstairs, scuffling
along the passage, hit the door with its head, and
then dashed upstairs again.
“It must have been poisoned,
or else it’s mad,” said the assistant.
“What’s it been eating, I wonder?”
The pawnbroker made no reply.
The suggestion of poisoning was a welcome one.
It was preferable to the sinister hintings of the brown
man. But even if it had been poisoned it was
a very singular coincidence, unless indeed the Burmese
had himself poisoned it He tried to think whether
it could have been possible for his visitor to have
administered poison undetected.
“It’s quiet now,”
said the assistant, and he opened the door a little
way.
“It’s all right,”
said the pawnbroker, half ashamed of his fears, “get
back to the shop.”
The assistant complied, and the Jew,
after sitting down a little while to persuade himself
that he really had no particular interest in the matter,
rose and went slowly upstairs. The staircase was
badly lighted, and half way up he stumbled on something
soft.
He gave a hasty exclamation and, stooping
down, saw that he had trodden on the dead cat.