Alias the Lone Wolf Part 14

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"It couldn't have been better arranged for the thieves," he declared.

"If only I had stayed in my room--!"

"If you had, it might possibly have been worse--mightn't it? The burglar--or burglars--knew precisely the location of the safe. They were coming to my room, and if they had found me awake ... I think it quite possible, my friend, that your appet.i.te for cigarettes may have saved my life."

"There's consolation in that," he confessed--"if it's any to you, who have lost so much."

"But perhaps I shall get my jewellery back."

"What makes you think that?"

"There's always the chance, isn't there? And I believe I have a clue, as they call it, an indefinite one but something to work from, perhaps."

"What is that?"

"It seems to me it must have been what the police at home call 'an inside job'; because whoever it was apparently knew the combination of the safe."

"You mean it wasn't broken open. That signifies nothing. I've never seen yours, but I know something about safes, and I'll undertake to open it without the combination within ten minutes."

"You, Monsieur d.u.c.h.emin?"

He nodded gloomily. "It's no great trick, once one knows it; with an ordinary safe, that is, such as you're apt to find in a private home.

Have you looked for finger-prints?"

"Not yet."

"Have you any idea how the thieves broke in?"

"Through this very window, I imagine. You see, I was up early and, in my agitation, dressed hurriedly and came downstairs hours before I usually do. The servants were already up, but hadn't opened the living rooms for the day. I myself found this window unlatched. The fastening is insecure, you see; it has been out of order for some time."

d.u.c.h.emin was on his feet, examining the latch. "True," he said; "but might not the wind--?"

"There was no wind to speak of last night, monsieur, and what there was didn't blow from that quarter." She added as d.u.c.h.emin stepped out through the window: "Where are you going?"

"To look for footprints on the tiling. It was misting when I went to bed, and with the mud--"

"But there was a heavy shower just before daybreak. If the thieves had left any tracks on the terra.s.se, the rain must have washed them clean away. I have already looked."

With a baffled gesture, d.u.c.h.emin turned back to her side.

"You have communicated with the police, of course."

She interrupted with an accent almost of impatience: "I have told n.o.body but you, monsieur, not even my mother and Louise."

"But why?"

"I wanted to consult you first, and..." She broke off sharply to ask: "Yes, Jean: what is it?"

The footman had entered to bring her cards over which Eve de Montalais arched her brows.

"Show the gentlemen in, please."

The servant retired.

"The men from Paris, madame?"

"Yes. You will excuse me--?"

d.u.c.h.emin bowed. "But one word: You can hardly do better than put the case in the hands of these gentlemen. They are apt to be of a good order of intelligence when selected to serve bankers, you know."

"I understand," she replied in her cool, sweet voice.

She went to meet the men in the middle of the room. d.u.c.h.emin turned back to the window, where, standing in the recess, with the light behind him, he could watch and reflect without his interest or emotions, becoming too apparent. And he was grateful for that moment of respite in which to compose and prepare himself. Within an hour, he knew, within a day or so at most, he must be under arrest, charged with the theft of the Montalais jewels, d.a.m.ned by his yesterday as much as by every turn of circ.u.mstantial evidence....

The men whom Jean ushered in proved to be, outwardly, what d.u.c.h.emin had expected: of a cla.s.s only too well-known to him, plain men of the people, una.s.suming, well-trained and informed, sceptical; not improbably shrewd hands in the game of thief-taking.

Saluting Madame de Montalais with calculated ceremony, one acting as spokesman offered to present their credentials. d.u.c.h.emin had a start of surprise to dissemble when he saw the woman wave these aside.

"It is not necessary, messieurs," she said. "I regret very much to have inconvenienced you, although of course it will make no difference in your bill; but I have brought you here to no purpose. The necessity for my contemplated journey no longer exists."

There were expressions of surprise to which she put an end with the words, accompanied by a charming smile: "Frankly, messieurs, I am afraid you will have to make allowances for the traditional inconsistency of my s.e.x: I have simply changed my mind."

There was nothing more to be said. Openly more than a little mystified, the men withdrew.

The smile with which she dismissed them lingered, delightful and enigmatic, as Eve recognised the stupefaction with which d.u.c.h.emin moved to remonstrate with her.

"Madame!" he cried in a low voice of wonder and protest--"why did you do that? Why let them go without telling them--?"

"I must have had a reason, don't you think, Monsieur d.u.c.h.emin?"

"I don't understand you, madame. You treat the loss of jewels as if it must be a secret private to ourselves, to you and to me!"

"Possibly that is my wish, monsieur." He gave a gesture of bewilderment. "Perhaps," she continued, meeting his blank stare with eyes in which amus.e.m.e.nt gave place to a look almost apologetic yet utterly kind--"perhaps I have more faith in you..."

d.u.c.h.emin bowed his head over hands so tightly knitted that the knuckles were white with strain.

"You would not have faith," he said in a low voice, "if you knew--"

She interrupted in a gentle voice: "Are you sure?"

"--What I must tell you!"

"My friend," she said: "tell me nothing that would distress you."

He did not immediately reply; the struggle going on within him was only too plainly betrayed by engorged veins upon his forehead and exceeding pallor of countenance.

"If you had told those detectives," he said at length, without looking up, "you must have known very soon. They must have found me out without too much delay. And who in the world would ever believe anybody else guilty when they learned that Andre d.u.c.h.emin, your guest for three weeks, was only an alias for Michael Lanyard, otherwise the Lone Wolf?"

"But you are wrong, monsieur," she replied, without the long pause of surprise he had antic.i.p.ated. "I should not have believed you guilty."

Alias the Lone Wolf Part 14

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Alias the Lone Wolf Part 14 summary

You're reading Alias the Lone Wolf Part 14. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Louis Joseph Vance already has 472 views.

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