The Black Bag, Louis Joseph Vance [some good books to read .txt] 📗
- Author: Louis Joseph Vance
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“Now, then,” Calendar proposed, “Mr. Kirkwood aside—peace be with
him!—let’s get down to cases.”
“Wot’s the row?” asked the captain.
“The row, Cap’n, is the Hallam female, who has unexpectedly shown up in
Antwerp, we have reason to believe with malicious intent and a private
detective to add to the gaiety of nations.”
“Wot’s the odds? She carn’t ‘urt us without lyin’ up trouble for ‘erself.”
“Damn little consolation to us when we’re working it out in Dartmoor.”
“Speak for yourself,” grunted Mulready surlily.
“I do,” returned Calendar easily; “we’re both in the shadow of Dartmoor,
Mul, my boy; since you choose to take the reference as personal. Sing Sing,
however, yawns for me alone; it’s going to keep on yawning, too, unless I
miss my guess. I love my native land most to death, but …”
“Ow, blow that!” interrupted the captain irritably. “Let’s ‘ear about the
‘Allam. Wot’re you afryd of?”
“‘Fraid she’ll set up a yell when she finds out we’re planting the loot,
Cap’n. She’s just that vindictive; you’d think she’d be satisfied with
her end of the stick, but you don’t know the Hallam. That milk-and-water
offspring of hers is the apple of her eye, and Freddie’s going to collar
the whole shooting-match or madam will kick over the traces.”
“Well?”
“Well, she’s queered us here. We can’t do anything if my lady is going to
camp on our trail and tell everybody we’re shady customers, can we? The
question now before the board is: Where now,—and how?”
“Amsterdam,” Mulready chimed in. “I told you that in the beginning.”
“But how?” argued Calendar. “The Lord knows I’m willing but … we can’t go
by rail, thanks to the Hallam. We’ve got to lose her first of all.”
“But wot I’m arskin’ is, wot’s the matter with—”
“The Alethea, Cap’n? Nothing, so far as Dick and I are concerned. But my
dutiful daughter is prejudiced; she’s been so long without proper paternal
discipline,” Calendar laughed, “that she’s rather high-spirited. Of course
I might overcome her objections, but the girl’s no fool, and every ounce
of pressure I bring to bear just now only helps make her more restless and
suspicious.”
“You leave her to me,” Mulready interposed, with a brutal laugh. “I’ll
guarantee to get her aboard, or…”
“Drop it, Dick!” Calendar advised quietly. “And go a bit easy with that
bottle for five minutes, can’t you?”
“Well, then,” Stryker resumed, apparently concurring in Calendar’s
attitude, “w’y don’t one of you tyke the stuff, go off quiet and dispose of
it to a proper fence, and come back to divide. I don’t see w’y that—”
“Naturally you wouldn’t,” chuckled Calendar. “Few people besides the two of
us understand the depth of affection existing between Dick, here, and
me. We just can’t bear to get out of sight of each other. We’re sure
inseparable—since night before last. Odd, isn’t it?”
“You drop it!” snarled Mulready, in accents so ugly that the listener was
startled. “Enough’s enough and—”
“There, there, Dick! All right; I’ll behave,” Calendar soothed him. “We’ll
forget and say no more about it.”
“Well, see you don’t.”
“But ‘as either of you a plan?” persisted Stryker.
“I have,” replied Mulready; “and it’s the simplest and best, if you could
only make this long-lost parent here see it.”
“Wot is it?”
Mulready seemed to ignore Calendar and address himself to the captain.
He articulated with some difficulty, slurring his words to the point of
indistinctness at times.
“Simple enough,” he propounded solemnly. “We’ve got the gladstone bag here;
Miss Dolly’s at the hotel—that’s her papa’s bright notion; he thinks she’s
to be trusted … Now then, what’s the matter with weighing anchor and
slipping quietly out to sea?”
“Leavin’ the dootiful darter?”
“Cert’n’y. She’s only a drag any way. ‘Better off without her…. Then we
can wait our time and get highest market prices—”
“You forget, Dick,” Calendar put it, “that there’s a thousand in it for
each of us if she’s kept out of England for six weeks. A thousand’s five
thousand in the land I hail from; I can use five thousand in my business.”
“Why can’t you be content with what you’ve got?” demanded Mulready
wrathfully.
“Because I’m a seventh son of a seventh son; I can see an inch or two
beyond my nose. If Dorothy ever finds her way back to England she’ll spoil
one of the finest fields of legitimate graft I ever licked my lips to look
at. The trouble with you, Mul, is you’re too high-toned. You want to play
the swell mobs-man from post to finish. A quick touch and a clean getaway
for yours. Now, that’s all right; that has its good points, but you don’t
want to underestimate the advantages of a good blackmailing connection….
If I can keep Dorothy quiet long enough, I look to the Hallam and precious
Freddie to be a great comfort to me in my old age.”
“Then, for God’s sake,” cried Mulready, “go to the hotel, get your brat by
the scruif of her pretty neck and drag her aboard. Let’s get out of this.”
“I won’t,” returned Calendar inflexibly.
The dispute continued, but the listener had heard enough. He had to get
away and think, could no longer listen; indeed, the voices of the three
blackguards below came but indistinctly to his ears, as if from a distance.
He was sick at heart and ablaze with indignation by turns. Unconsciously he
was trembling violently in every limb; swept by alternate waves of heat and
cold, feverish one minute, shivering the next. All of which phenomena were
due solely to the rage that welled inside his heart.
Stealthily he crept away to the rail, to stand grasping it and staring
across the water with unseeing eyes at the gay old city twinkling back with
her thousand eyes of light. The cool night breeze, sweeping down unhindered
over the level Netherlands from the bleak North Sea, was comforting to
his throbbing temples. By degrees his head cleared, his rioting pulses
subsided, he could think; and he did.
Over there, across the water, in the dingy and disreputable H�tel du
Commerce, Dorothy waited in her room, doubtless the prey of unnumbered
nameless terrors, while aboard the brigantine her fate was being decided by
a council of three unspeakable scoundrels, one of whom, professing himself
her father, openly declared his intention of using her to further his
selfish and criminal ends.
His first and natural thought, to steal away to her and induce her to
accompany him back to England, Kirkwood perforce discarded. He could
have wept over the realization of his unqualified impotency. He had no
money,—not even cab-fare from the hotel to the railway station. Something
subtler, more crafty, had to be contrived to meet the emergency. And there
was one way, one only; he could see none other. Temporarily he must make
himself one of the company of her enemies, force himself upon them,
ingratiate himself into their good graces, gain their confidence, then,
when opportunity offered, betray them. And the power to make them tolerate
him, if not receive him as a fellow, the knowledge of them and their plans
that they had unwittingly given him, was his.
And Dorothy, was waiting….
He swung round and without attempting to muffle his footfalls strode toward
the companionway. He must pretend he had just come aboard.
Subconsciously he had been aware, during his time of pondering, that the
voices in the cabin had been steadily gaining in volume, rising louder and
yet more loud, Mulready’s ominous, drink-blurred accents dominating the
others. There was a quarrel afoot; as soon as he gave it heed, Kirkwood
understood that Mulready, in the madness of his inflamed brain, was forcing
the issue while Calendar sought vainly to calm and soothe him.
The American arrived at the head of the companionway at a critical
juncture. As he moved to descend some low, cool-toned retort of Calendar’s
seemed to enrage his confederate beyond reason. He yelped aloud with wrath,
sprang to his feet, knocking over a chair, and leaping back toward the foot
of the steps, flashed an adroit hand behind him and found his revolver.
“I’ve stood enough from you!” he screamed, his voice oddly clear in that
moment of insanity. “You’ve played with me as long as you will, you hulking
American hog! And now I’m going to show—”
As he held his fire to permit his denunciation to bite home, Kirkwood,
appalled to find himself standing on the threshold of a tragedy, gathered
himself together and launched through the air, straight for the madman’s
shoulders.
As they went down together, sprawling, Mulready’s head struck against a
transom and the revolver fell from his limp fingers.
XIV STRATAGEMS AND SPOILSPrepared as he had been for the shock, Kirkwood was able to pick himself up
quickly, uninjured, Mulready’s revolver in his grasp.
On his feet, straddling Mulready’s insentient body, he confronted Calendar
and Stryker. The face of the latter was a sickly green, the gift of his
fright. The former seemed coldly composed, already recovering from his
surprise and bringing his wits to bear upon the new factor which had been
so unceremoniously injected into the situation.
[Illustration: Straddling Mulready’s body, he confronted Calendar and
Stryker.]
Standing, but leaning heavily upon a hand that rested flat on the table,
in the other he likewise held a revolver, which he had apparently drawn in
self-defense, at the crisis of Mulready’s frenzy. Its muzzle was deflected.
He looked Kirkwood over with a cool gray eye, the color gradually returning
to his fat, clean-shaven cheeks, replacing the pardonable pallor which had
momentarily rested thereon.
As for Kirkwood, he had covered the fat adventurer before he knew it.
Stryker, who had been standing immediately in the rear of Calendar,
immediately cowered and cringed to find himself in the line of fire.
Of the three conscious men in the brigantine’s cabin, Calendar was probably
the least confused or excited. Stryker was palpably unmanned. Kirkwood was
tingling with a sense of mastery, but collected and rapidly revolving the
combinations for the reversed conditions which had been brought about by
Mulready’s drunken folly. His elation was apparent in his shining, boyish
eyes, as well as in the bright color that glowed in his cheeks. When he
decided to speak it was with rapid enunciation, but clearly and concisely.
“Calendar,” he began, “if a single shot is fired about this vessel the
river police will be buzzing round your ears in a brace of shakes.”
The fat adventurer nodded assent, his eyes contracting.
“Very well!” continued Kirkwood brusquely. “You must know that I have
personally nothing to fear from the police; if arrested, I wouldn’t be
detained a day. On the other hand, you … Hand me that pistol, Calendar,
butt first, please. Look sharp, my man! If you don’t…”
He left the ellipsis to be filled in by the corpulent blackguard’s
intelligence. The latter, gray eyes still intent on the younger man’s face,
wavered, plainly impressed, but still wondering.
“Quick! I’m not patient to-night…”
No longer was Calendar of two minds. In the face of Kirkwood’s attitude
there was but one course to be followed: that of obedience. Calendar
surrendered an untenable position as gracefully as could be wished.
“I guess you know what you mean by this,” he said, tendering the weapon as
per instructions; “I’m doggoned if I do…. You’ll allow a certain
latitude in consideration of my relief; I can’t say we were anticipating
this—ah—Heavensent visitation.”
Accepting the revolver with his left hand and
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