Delphi Collected Works of Maurice Leblanc (Illustrated) (Delphi Series Nine Book 17)
Page 56
“Thank you,” said Guerchard.
“Good-night,” said M. Gournay-Martin.
“Good-night, M. Guerchard,” said Germaine.
“I think, after all, I’ll change my mind and go with you. I’m very short of sleep,” said the Duke. “Good-night, M. Guerchard.”
“You’re never going too, your Grace!” cried Guerchard.
“Why, you don’t want me to stay, do you?” said the Duke.
“Yes,” said Guerchard slowly.
“I think I would rather go to bed,” said the Duke gaily.
“Are you afraid?” said Guerchard, and there was challenge, almost an insolent challenge, in his tone.
There was a pause. The Duke frowned slightly with a reflective air. Then he drew himself up; and said a little haughtily:
“You’ve certainly found the way to make me stay, M. Guerchard.”
“Yes, yes; stay, stay,” said M. Gournay-Martin hastily. “It’s an excellent idea, excellent. You’re the very man to help M. Guerchard, Duke. You’re an intrepid explorer, used to danger and resourceful, absolutely fearless.”
“Do you really mean to say you’re not going home to bed, Jacques?” said Germaine, disregarding her father’s wish with her usual frankness.
“No; I’m going to stay with M. Guerchard,” said the Duke slowly.
“Well, you will be fresh to go to the Princess’s to-morrow night.” said Germaine petulantly. “You didn’t get any sleep at all last night, you couldn’t have. You left Charmerace at eight o’clock; you were motoring all the night, and only got to Paris at six o’clock this morning.”
“Motoring all night, from eight o’clock to six!” muttered Guerchard under his breath.
“Oh, that will be all right,” said the Duke carelessly. “This interesting affair is to be over by midnight, isn’t it?”
“Well, I warn you that, tired or fresh, you will have to come with me to the Princess’s to-morrow night. All Paris will be there — all Paris, that is, who are in Paris.”
“Oh, I shall be fresh enough,” said the Duke.
They went out of the drawing-room and down the stairs, all four of them. There was an alert readiness about Guerchard, as if he were ready to spring. He kept within a foot of the Duke right to the front door. The detective in charge opened it; and they went down the steps to the taxi-cab which was awaiting them. The Duke kissed Germaine’s fingers and handed her into the taxi-cab.
M. Gournay-Martin paused at the cab-door, and turned and said, with a pathetic air, “Am I never to sleep in my own house again?” He got into the cab and drove off.
The Duke turned and came up the steps, followed by Guerchard. In the hall he took his opera-hat and coat from the stand, and went upstairs. Half-way up the flight he paused and said:
“Where shall we wait for Lupin, M. Guerchard? In the drawing-room, or in M. Gournay-Martin’s bedroom?”
“Oh, the drawing-room,” said Guerchard. “I think it very unlikely that Lupin will look for the coronet in M. Gournay-Martin’s bedroom. He would know very well that that is the last place to find it now.”
The Duke went on into the drawing-room. At the door Guerchard stopped and said: “I will just go and post my men, your Grace.”
“Very good,” said the Duke; and he went into the drawing-room.
He sat down, lighted a cigarette, and yawned. Then he took out his watch and looked at it.
“Another twenty minutes,” he said.
CHAPTER XIX
THE DUKE GOES
WHEN GUERCHARD JOINED the Duke in the drawing-room, he had lost his calm air and was looking more than a little nervous. He moved about the room uneasily, fingering the bric-a-brac, glancing at the Duke and looking quickly away from him again. Then he came to a standstill on the hearth-rug with his back to the fireplace.
“Do you think it’s quite safe to stand there, at least with your back to the hearth? If Lupin dropped through that opening suddenly, he’d catch you from behind before you could wink twice,” said the Duke, in a tone of remonstrance.
“There would always be your Grace to come to my rescue,” said Guerchard; and there was an ambiguous note in his voice, while his piercing eyes now rested fixed on the Duke’s face. They seemed never to leave it; they explored, and explored it.
“It’s only a suggestion,” said the Duke.
“This is rather nervous work, don’t you know.”
“Yes; and of course you’re hardly fit for it,” said Guerchard. “If I’d known about your break-down in your car last night, I should have hesitated about asking you—”
“A break-down?” interrupted the Duke.
“Yes, you left Charmerace at eight o’clock last night. And you only reached Paris at six this morning. You couldn’t have had a very high-power car?” said Guerchard.
“I had a 100 h.-p. car,” said the Duke.
“Then you must have had a devil of a break-down,” said Guerchard.
“Yes, it was pretty bad, but I’ve known worse,” said the Duke carelessly. “It lost me about three hours: oh, at least three hours. I’m not a first-class repairer, though I know as much about an engine as most motorists.”
“And there was nobody there to help you repair it?” said Guerchard.
“No; M. Gournay-Martin could not let me have his chauffeur to drive me to Paris, because he was keeping him to help guard the chateau. And of course there was nobody on the road, because it was two o’clock in the morning.”
“Yes, there was no one,” said Guerchard slowly.
“Not a soul,” said the Duke.
“It was unfortunate,” said Guerchard; and there was a note of incredulity in his voice.
“My having to repair the car myself?” said the Duke.
“Yes, of course,” said Guerchard, hesitating a little over the assent.
The Duke dropped the end of his cigarette into a tray, and took out his case. He held it out towards Guerchard, and said, “A cigarette? or perhaps you prefer your caporal?”
“Yes, I do, but all the same I’ll have one,” said Guerchard, coming quickly across the room. And he took a cigarette from the case, and looked at it.
“All the same, all this is very curious,” he said in a new tone, a challenging, menacing, accusing tone.
“What?” said the Duke, looking at him curiously.
“Everything: your cigarettes ... the salvias ... the photograph that Bonavent found in Victoire’s prayer-book ... that man in motoring dress ... and finally, your break-down,” said Guerchard; and the accusation and the threat rang clearer.
The Duke rose from his chair quickly and said haughtily, in icy tones: “M. Guerchard, you’ve been drinking!”
He went to the chair on which he had set his overcoat and his hat, and picked them up. Guerchard sprang in front of him, barring his way, and cried in a shaky voice: “No; don’t go! You mustn’t go!”
“What do you mean?” said the Duke, and paused. “What DO you mean?”
Guerchard stepped back, and ran his hand over his forehead. He was very pale, and his forehead was clammy to his touch:
“No ... I beg your pardon ... I beg your pardon, your Grace ... I must be going mad,” he stammered.
“It looks very like it,” said the Duke coldly.
“What I mean to say is,” said Guerchard in a halting, uncertain voice, “what I mean to say is: help me ... I want you to stay here, to help me against Lupin, you understand. Will you, your Grace?”
“Yes, certainly; of course I will, if you want me to,” said the Duke, in a more gentle voice. “But you seem awfully upset, and you’re upsetting me too. We shan’t have a nerve between us soon, if you don’t pull yourself together.”
“Yes, yes, please excuse me,” muttered Guerchard.
“Very good,” said the Duke. “But what is it we’re going to do?”
Guerchard hesitated. He pulled out his handkerchief, and mopped his forehead: “Well ... the coronet ... is it in this case?” he said in a shaky voice, and
set the case on the table.
“Of course it is,” said the Duke impatiently.
Guerchard opened the case, and the coronet sparkled and gleamed brightly in the electric light: “Yes, it is there; you see it?” said Guerchard.
“Yes, I see it; well?” said the Duke, looking at him in some bewilderment, so unlike himself did he seem.
“We’re going to wait,” said Guerchard.
“What for?” said the Duke.
“Lupin,” said Guerchard.
“Lupin? And you actually do believe that, just as in a fairy tale, when that clock strikes twelve, Lupin will enter and take the coronet?”
“Yes, I do; I do,” said Guerchard with stubborn conviction. And he snapped the case to.
“This is most exciting,” said the Duke.
“You’re sure it doesn’t bore you?” said Guerchard huskily.
“Not a bit of it,” said the Duke, with cheerful derision. “To make the acquaintance of this scoundrel who has fooled you for ten years is as charming a way of spending the evening as I can think of.”
“You say that to me?” said Guerchard with a touch of temper.
“Yes,” said the Duke, with a challenging smile. “To you.”
He sat down in an easy chair by the table. Guerchard sat down in a chair on the other side of it, and set his elbows on it. They were silent.
Suddenly the Duke said, “Somebody’s coming.”
Guerchard started, and said: “No, I don’t hear any one.”
Then there came distinctly the sound of a footstep and a knock at the door.
“You’ve got keener ears than I,” said Guerchard grudgingly. “In all this business you’ve shown the qualities of a very promising detective.” He rose, went to the door, and unlocked it.
Bonavent came in: “I’ve brought you the handcuffs, sir,” he said, holding them out. “Shall I stay with you?”
“No,” said Guerchard. “You’ve two men at the back door, and two at the front, and a man in every room on the ground-floor?”
“Yes, and I’ve got three men on every other floor,” said Bonavent, in a tone of satisfaction.
“And the house next door?” said Guerchard.
“There are a dozen men in it,” said Bonavent. “No communication between the two houses is possible any longer.”
Guerchard watched the Duke’s face with intent eyes. Not a shadow flickered its careless serenity.
“If any one tries to enter the house, collar him. If need be, fire on him,” said Guerchard firmly. “That is my order; go and tell the others.”
“Very good, sir,” said Bonavent; and he went out of the room.
“By Jove, we are in a regular fortress,” said the Duke.
“It’s even more of a fortress than you think, your Grace. I’ve four men on that landing,” said Guerchard, nodding towards the door.
“Oh, have you?” said the Duke, with a sudden air of annoyance.
“You don’t like that?” said Guerchard quickly.
“I should jolly well think not,” said the Duke. “With these precautions, Lupin will never be able to get into this room at all.”
“He’ll find it a pretty hard job,” said Guerchard, smiling. “Unless he falls from the ceiling, or unless—”
“Unless you’re Arsène Lupin,” interrupted the Duke.
“In that case, you’d be another, your Grace,” said Guerchard.
They both laughed. The Duke rose, yawned, picked up his coat and hat, and said, “Ah, well, I’m off to bed.”
“What?” said Guerchard.
“Well,” said the Duke, yawning again, “I was staying to see Lupin. As there’s no longer any chance of seeing him—”
“But there is ... there is ... so stay,” cried Guerchard.
“Do you still cling to that notion?” said the Duke wearily.
“We SHALL see him,” said Guerchard.
“Nonsense!” said the Duke.
Guerchard lowered his voice and said with an air of the deepest secrecy: “He’s already here, your Grace.”
“Lupin? Here?” cried the Duke.
“Yes; Lupin,” said Guerchard.
“Where?” cried the astonished Duke.
“He is,” said Guerchard.
“As one of your men?” said the Duke eagerly.
“I don’t think so,” said Guerchard, watching him closely.
“Well, but, well, but — if he’s here we’ve got him.... He is going to turn up,” said the Duke triumphantly; and he set down his hat on the table beside the coronet.
“I hope so,” said Guerchard. “But will he dare to?”
“How do you mean?” said the Duke, with a puzzled air.
“Well, you have said yourself that this is a fortress. An hour ago, perhaps, Lupin was resolved to enter this room, but is he now?”
“I see what you mean,” said the Duke, in a tone of disappointment.
“Yes; you see that now it needs the devil’s own courage. He must risk everything to gain everything, and throw off the mask. Is Lupin going to throw himself into the wolf’s jaws? I dare not think it. What do you think about it?”
Guerchard’s husky voice had hardened to a rough harshness; there was a ring of acute anxiety in it, and under the anxiety a faint note of challenge, of a challenge that dare not make itself too distinct. His anxious, challenging eyes burned on the face of the Duke, as if they strove with all intensity to pierce a mask.
The Duke looked at him curiously, as if he were trying to divine what he would be at, but with a careless curiosity, as if it were a matter of indifference to him what the detective’s object was; then he said carelessly: “Well, you ought to know better than I. You have known him for ten years ....” He paused, and added with just the faintest stress in his tone, “At least, by reputation.”
The anxiety in the detective’s face grew plainer, it almost gave him the air of being unnerved; and he said quickly, in a jerky voice: “Yes, and I know his way of acting too. During the last ten years I have learnt to unravel his intrigues — to understand and anticipate his manoeuvres.... Oh, his is a clever system! ... Instead of lying low, as you’d expect, he attacks his opponent ... openly.... He confuses him — at least, he tries to.” He smiled a half-confident, a half-doubtful smile, “It is a mass of entangled, mysterious combinations. I’ve been caught in them myself again and again. You smile?”
“It interests me so,” said the Duke, in a tone of apology.
“Oh, it interests me,” said Guerchard, with a snarl. “But this time I see my way clearly. No more tricks — no more secret paths ... We’re fighting in the light of day.” He paused, and said in a clear, sneering voice, “Lupin has pluck, perhaps, but it’s only thief’s pluck.”
“Oh, is it?” said the Duke sharply, and there was a sudden faint glitter in his eyes.
“Yes; rogues have very poor qualities,” sneered Guerchard.
“One can’t have everything,” said the Duke quietly; but his languid air had fallen from him.
“Their ambushes, their attacks, their fine tactics aren’t up to much,” said Guerchard, smiling contemptuously.
“You go a trifle too far, I think,” said the Duke, smiling with equal contempt.
They looked one another in the eyes with a long, lingering look. They had suddenly the air of fencers who have lost their tempers, and are twisting the buttons off their foils.
“Not a bit of it, your Grace,” said Guerchard; and his voice lingered on the words “your Grace” with a contemptuous stress. “This famous Lupin is immensely overrated.”
“However, he has done some things which aren’t half bad,” said the Duke, with his old charming smile.
He had the air of a duelist drawing his blade lovingly through his fingers before he falls to.
“Oh, has he?” said Guerchard scornfully.
“Yes; one must be fair. Last night’s burglary, for instance: it is not unheard of, but it wasn’t half bad. And that theft of the motorcars:
it was a neat piece of work,” said the Duke in a gentle, insolent voice, infinitely aggravating.
Guerchard snorted scornfully.
“And a robbery at the British Embassy, another at the Treasury, and a third at M. Lepine’s — all in the same week — it wasn’t half bad, don’t you know?” said the Duke, in the same gentle, irritating voice.
“Oh, no, it wasn’t. But—”
“And the time when he contrived to pass as Guerchard — the Great Guerchard — do you remember that?” the Duke interrupted. “Come, come — to give the devil his due — between ourselves — it wasn’t half bad.”
“No,” snarled Guerchard. “But he has done better than that lately.... Why don’t you speak of that?”
“Of what?” said the Duke.
“Of the time when he passed as the Duke of Charmerace,” snapped Guerchard.
“What! Did he do that?” cried the Duke; and then he added slowly, “But, you know, I’m like you — I’m so easy to imitate.”
“What would have been amusing, your Grace, would have been to get as far as actual marriage,” said Guerchard more calmly.
“Oh, if he had wanted to,” said the Duke; and he threw out his hands. “But you know — married life — for Lupin.”
“A large fortune ... a pretty girl,” said Guerchard, in a mocking tone.
“He must be in love with some one else,” said the Duke.
“A thief, perhaps,” sneered Guerchard.
“Like himself.... And then, if you wish to know what I think, he must have found his fiancee rather trying,” said the Duke, with his charming smile.
“After all, it’s pitiful — heartrending, you must admit it, that, on the very eve of his marriage, he was such a fool as to throw off the mask. And yet at bottom it’s quite logical; it’s Lupin coming out through Charmerace. He had to grab at the dowry at the risk of losing the girl,” said Guerchard, in a reflective tone; but his eyes were intent on the face of the Duke.
“Perhaps that’s what one should call a marriage of reason,” said the Duke, with a faint smile.
“What a fall!” said Guerchard, in a taunting voice. “To be expected, eagerly, at the Princess’s to-morrow evening, and to pass the evening in a police-station ... to have intended in a month’s time, as the Duke of Charmerace, to mount the steps of the Madeleine with all pomp and to fall down the father-in-law’s staircase this evening — this very evening” — his voice rose suddenly on a note of savage triumph— “with the handcuffs on! What? Is that a good enough revenge for Guerchard — for that poor old idiot, Guerchard? The rogues’ Brummel in a convict’s cap! The gentleman-burglar in a gaol! For Lupin it’s only a trifling annoyance, but for a duke it’s a disaster! Come, in your turn, be frank: don’t you find that amusing?”