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Hulbert Footner

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Beschreibung

Dick Shemwell found himself in London, three thousand miles from home. He didn't have a penny and he didn't know a soul. He had tried honesty all his life; now he was ready to take a shot at crookedness. As he sat dejectedly in a hotel lobby, his face must have showed his thoughts, for five minutes later he had been invited to participate in an adventure that was to keep him that one jump ahead of violent death for some time to come.
Hired by a band of crooks to steal a pearl necklace from another crook who had stolen it from still another crook, he found himself whiled all over England, across the ocean and back again, the target of police and criminals alike, till a desperate battle solved the situation and set him right in the eyes of the law

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NOVELS BY

HULBERT FOOTNER

Anybody’s Pearls

The Furbringers

The Fugitive Sleuth

The Huntress

Thieves’ Wit

On Swan River

The Sealed Valley

Jack Chanty

The Wild Bird

The Shanty Sled

Roger Manion’s Girl

Country Love

The Chase of the Linda Belle

Two on the Trail

Cap’n Sue

Anybody’s Pearls

BY

HULBERT FOOTNER

First book edition 1930.

ANYBODY’S PEARLS          PART I

1

Sitting in the lounge of the Chester, the most expensive hotel in London, Dick Shemwell looked as if he belonged, but he had not a cent in his pockets, and not a soul in the world to back him up. Fortune had not smiled on Dick lately; in the middle of his senior year, his benefactor and guardian had died without having made a will in his favour; and almost overnight Dick had dropped from the position of a leader in the most expensive set at Haleton to that of a broker’s messenger.

His present position was due to a crack-brained impulse that he had yielded to. A week before he had been drawn by a sort of sickness of the heart to the Brevard Line pier in New York to see the Baratoria depart for Europe with those luckier young fellows who had fathers with well-filled pockets. On the pier he had fallen in with four former class-mates who were about to sail, and Nutty Filbert had hilariously suggested that they smuggle Dick across.

They had actually got away with it. Dick had been passed along from cabin to cabin, and the others had simulated sea-sickness by turns, so that they might order meals served in their cabins. The officers of the Baratoria never suspected that they were carrying one in the first-class, who was not down on the passenger list. The voyage had been one long joke.

But as they approached Southampton, a more serious difficulty confronted them; how to get Dick ashore without a passport? It was then that Nutty Filbert et al proved themselves to be lads of more spirit than staying power. They were scared off by the English officials. In short, the four sickened of their joke, and Dick was left to get himself ashore as best he could.

This he had accomplished without much difficulty, by bribing a steward to lend him a uniform. With the aid of the uniform he had escaped down the service gangway, unmolested. But the bribe, together with his fare to London, and dinner the night before, had taken every cent he possessed. He had spent the night on the Embankment, and here he was in the Chester seeking to panhandle a breakfast.

The worst of it was, that Filbert et al, conscious of not having treated Dick squarely, were now trying to keep out of his way. A few minutes before Dick had seen one of them get out of an elevator, and seeing him, Dick, dart back again. Ah! the quitters! thought Dick sorely. He was sore and anxious too. If the American lads failed him, what would he do? He had blithely set out from New York with the intention of living by his wits thereafter. Only broken-spirited nags submitted to the harness, he told himself. But in a foreign town where one didn’t know the ropes, where was one to begin?

He anxiously felt of his chin. Not much there yet, because he had shaved with Nutty’s razor the day before. But if another day passed without his getting a shave, he would have to resign all claim to be considered one of the upper classes. He couldn’t sit in the Chester all the time, and they said it rained in England nearly every day. One good shower would ruin him!

While Dick was sitting there a prey to these gloomy thoughts, a handsome young Englishman came into the hotel, followed by a boy carrying his kit bag and great coat. A tall, slender fellow in his early thirties, most beautifully turned out from monocle to white spats. He looked around him with a lordly assurance that made Dick secretly envious. This was the type upon which Dick and his friends at Haleton had modelled themselves. Dick stored away details for future use; the small Fedora hat with just the right amount of curl to the brim; the well-cut blue suit—but not too well-cut; the plain stick of some rare tropical wood; the homely well-made shoes. But what Dick most admired was that cool, disdainful manner; Dick thought he must be the eldest son of an earl at least.

Dick was sitting immediately in front of the hotel desk, and he heard the young man ask for a room and “bahth.” Strangely enough, the clerk did not seem to be in the least impressed by his aristocratic hauteur. With a hard look he gave the young man to understand that the house was full.

“Full!” echoed the young man, running up his eyebrows. “I am Lord Greatorex!”

I thought so! Dick said to himself, and looked to see the clerk collapse. But that composed man only smiled in a disagreeable fashion, and said, without raising his voice:

“I know who you are. You’d better go quietly, or I’ll send for the police.”

Drawing himself up, the young man gave the hotel employee a terrible look; but the clerk coolly faced him out. Whereupon the young man turned on his heel, and with a haughty nod to the boy to fetch his things, strode out of the hotel again. The boy followed, grinning. The several clerks behind the desk laughed amongst themselves.

Dick was so much excited by this incident that he forgot his own anomalous position in the place. Stepping to the desk, he asked:

“Who was that?”

The clerk turned, smiling still. “Oh, he has many names,” he said. “He’s known to the police as George Allington. One of the smoothest swindlers in London.”

Dick did some quick thinking. He had been enormously impressed by the style and the assurance of this man. When he was caught out, they had got no change out of him. He had marched out as haughty as ever. He must have an iron nerve! You can expect nothing from the American crowd, Dick told himself; here’s a man who lives by his wits in London; why not make up to him?

Acting on the impulse, he walked out of the Chester. Allington, or whatever his name might be, was standing in the entrance court giving instructions to a taxi-driver. His things were put in the cab.

“Take them to 107, Artillery Mansions,” he said, tossing the man a silver piece.

The cab drove away, and Allington walked nonchalantly out into the crowded Strand, swinging his stick. Dick followed discreetly.

2

Allington walked westward in the Strand with his arrogant gaze fixed above the heads of the crowd as if he owned London. Every moment Dick feared to see him turn into some building where he could not follow. They came to an open space with a tall column in the centre, surmounted by a one-armed man, and having four huge lions at its base. Dick learned later that this was the Nelson column; the open space, Trafalgar Square. Crossing it, Allington passed under a colonnade which formed the gateway to a wide avenue lined with trees. This, Dick came to know, was the Mall, which led to Buckingham Palace. There was a lovely park with old trees on the left, and Allington turned into it. Dick hastened to overtake him.

“Good morning,” he said pleasantly.

The Englishman looked him over warily without replying.

“I’m a stranded American,” said Dick.

“Why not go to your consul?” said Allington sourly.

“He’d turn me over to the police.”

“Well, we’ve got our own unemployed,” said Allington with a hard smile.

“You get me wrong,” said Dick. “I’m not trying to make a touch. Though at that, I haven’t had my breakfast. I want you to put me wise to this burg, so I can scratch my own worms.”

The Englishman stared hard. “I don’t understand you,” he said.

“Say, you fellows ought to come to America and learn English,” said Dick grinning. “I was in the Chester just now when you came in. I saw them give you the razz.”

Allington bare his teeth in an ugly fashion, and his black eyes bored Dick through and through. Dick made haste to placate him.

“I liked the cut of your jib,” he said. “I fell for you, see? So I followed you.”

“What’s your name?” asked the other.

Dick had already made up his mind as to the part he would play. “Oh, my monaker’s Kid Murray Hill,” he said carelessly.

“Oh, a crook, eh?” said Allington, more at his ease.

“Well, it depends upon who uses the word,” said Dick. “It’s not a pretty word.”

“No offence,” said the Englishman, now quite anxious to be friendly. “I’ve heard how sharp you fellows are. . . . Did you hear what was said there in the Chester?” he asked with a keen look.

“Yes,” said Dick, “I was right behind you.”

“It’s infamous!” cried Allington, brandishing his stick as if he had the clerk before him at that moment. “I’m Lord Greatorex,” he went on with an air of simple dignity. “I don’t suppose you ever heard of me in America, but I’m quite well known here. I own eighteen thousand acres in Northumberland.”

Dick bit his lip to keep from smiling. “Oh, I spotted you for a lord first go,” he said with a serious air.

“They made a terrible mistake at the Chester,” Allington went on, “and the worst of it is, I can’t make them smart for it. Because, well, to tell the truth, I went to the Chester on a very delicate piece of business, and I can’t afford to have it get in the papers.”

Dick pricked up his ears. “Yes!” he said sympathetically.

But Allington (or Greatorex as Dick called him from thenceforward) changed the subject. “Tell me something about youself,” he said affably. “You’re a new type to me. I’d love to go to America.”

“I’m too faint to talk,” said Dick insinuatingly. “If I had a skinful I’d give you an earful.”

“Oh, your American slang is priceless!” said Greatorex laughing. “You must teach it to me. Come on, I know a nice little place to eat in Queen Anne’s Gate.”

They had quite a merry meal in the little restaurant, each man playing his respective comedy part. Greatorex enlarged in his casual manner upon life amongst the aristocracy, while Dick countered with several detailed histories of “jobs” that he had pulled off with the aid of his pals in New York. Until his fifteenth year Dick had scrambled for a living in the streets, and this part of his life supplied him with plenty of local colour for his yarns. Dick modestly confessed that it was owing to his having inadvertently “plugged a bull” that he had been obliged to beat it to England. As he downed the good food his spirits rose amazingly. He got more fun out of the situation than the other man, because he was on to Greatorex’s bluff, whereas Greatorex was not on to him. Dick said to himself: If this is one of England’s smart ones, I guess I’m just a little bit smarter.

All the while they talked, Greatorex was weighing and studying Dick with his sharp, hard glances. Trying to make up his mind whether he can use me to pull his chestnuts out of the fire, thought Dick. Does he think I can’t see it? Greatorex held off from making any confidences yet awhile. He excused himself from the table in order to telephone. After the meal he insisted on taking Dick for a drive in a taxi to show him Piccadilly and Hyde Park.

They returned to Victoria, and had themselves put down at what Greatorex called a “pub,” opposite the station. “Gosh! this is what the old fellows talk about at home!” said Dick, seeing the mahogany and the brass rail. But he realised there could never have been anything so democratic as this establishment in so-called democratic America. It astonished him to see silk-hatted gentlemen rubbing elbows with truck-drivers. The other sex, too. Elegantly clad ladies who had dropped in for a gin and ginger on their way to shop; and charwomen with their pints of ’alf-and-’alf. “It’s a relief to order a drink in a natural voice,” said Dick.

“Confound it, there’s a man I know,” said Greatorex in an annoyed tone. “Disgusting little Jew, but one must be agreeable to him, because one borrows money from him. We large landowners are frequently short of cash, you know.”

This individual approached them fulsomely. He was a more Jewish-looking Jew than the New York variety; hooked nose, hollow cheek-bones, thin grey beard; silk hat rubbed the wrong way, greasy frock coat. Dick perceived where the vaudeville comedians had got their idea. He answered to the name of Abrams. Something told Dick that this was the man Greatorex had telephoned to. Probably the brains of the gang, he said to himself.

Mr. Abrams insisted on treating, and the three of them sat down at a table in the back room. Greatorex and Abrams made an odd contrast, but in London nobody seemed to remark it. They all ordered a double Scotch. It occurred to Dick that he had better watch those drinks, but he dismissed the thought. Such stunts were never pulled in a crowded place like this. And anyhow, I should worry, thought Dick. That’s the advantage of having empty pockets.

The talk amounted to nothing at all; it had to do with the weather, and the impossibility of prohibition in England. It was funny to hear a Jew talking with a cockney accent; mixed Yiddish and cockney. Nothing was said that Dick could remember, but all the time he was aware that he was being subjected to a sharper and more experienced scrutiny than Greatorex’s. Finally a slight signal passed between Abrams and Greatorex, and the Jew got up to go.

I have been accepted, thought Dick, with rising excitement.

3

Greatorex was now all affability, though he still worked in touches of arrogance in order to keep Dick impressed with his aristocratic quality, as when he said: “Let’s go to my digs where we can talk quietly. I can’t take you to my club, they’re so damn particular. It’s the Junior Carlton, you know.”

Dick didn’t know, but he silently damned the man for his impudence, and accepted his invitation with a grin.

They walked down Victoria street, which reminded the New Yorker of West Forty-Second between Sixth and Broadway. Coming towards them Dick beheld his four shipmates of the Baratoria, arm in arm, seeing the sights. Here was a chance. Dick took Greatorex’s arm.

The four Americans seeing Dick’s elegant companion, looked rather nonplussed. Dick hailed them cheerfully.

“Hello, fellows! I want you to meet my friend Lord Greatorex.” He told them off to the Englishman. “Mr. Filbert; Mr. Manby; Mr. Debenham; Mr. Papps.”

Greatorex screwed his monocle more firmly into his eye, and gave them each a curt nod. “Hah-je-do!” he enunciated four times, and looked away. He seemed not to see the outstretched hands. The four innocents were enormously impressed by his style. Up to that moment they had felt as if they were showing the Londoners something, but all were conscious that Greatorex made them look like hicks.

“. . . Er . . . Let’s go somewhere and have a smile,” suggested Filbert.

“Sorry, old man,” said Dick, “but Lord Greatorex and I are lunching with the Marquess of Salisbury . . . See you later.”

They walked on. Dick felt avenged.

Greatorex’s rooms were in a big apartment house—mansions they are called in London. They were pleasant enough, but rather small and dark; hardly a fitting town residence for a peer with eighteen thousand acres.

“Up until this year I’ve always lived at the Albany,” said Greatorex languidly, “but they’re letting in the stockbrokers.”

This remark was rather wasted on Dick, who did not then know that an address at the Albany is the hall-mark of the real thing in young blood.

Dick’s sharp eyes perceived that the numerous photographs displayed about the rooms did not suggest aristocratic relatives. There was one in a silver frame though, of a dark-eyed girl who was beautiful enough to be anything. Greatorex had good taste, he thought.

His host brought out a bottle of Scotch, apologising for the necessity of waiting on themselves. “I gave my man a holiday,” he said; “thinking I would be at the Chester for the next few days.”

“How could they have made such a mistake at the Chester!” said Dick sympathetically.

“Oh, I have enemies!” said Greatorex darkly.

Greatorex unobtrusively shifted the photograph in the silver frame, that it might the more easily catch Dick’s eye. And Dick allowed his eye to be caught, and waited for what would come of it.

“My sister, the Countess of Brentford,” said Greatorex carelessly.

“She’s easy to look at,” said Dick, dryly.

“I suppose so,” said the other, flicking the ash off his cigarette. “But of course, one hardly sees one’s sister. They call her the most beautiful woman in England.”

“I can well believe it,” said Dick.

“She’s married to a frightful rotter,” Greatorex went on, “but a big-wig of course, and all that. Fortunately he doesn’t trouble her much. They go their own ways.”

“She’s far too good for him,” said Dick encouragingly.

“Quite!” said Greatorex.

“Funny we should be talking about her,” Greatorex presently went on; “for it was poor Millicent’s business that took me to the Chester this morning.”

“Is that so?” said Dick.

Greatorex sprang up and began to pace the sitting-room. “Oh, it’s the devil of a business! the devil of a business!” he cried in seeming agitation; but Dick perceived the glint of the self-pleased actor in his black eyes. “I don’t know what to do now!”

“If I could help?” suggested Dick.

“No, my dear fellow, it’s a family affair. And so I can confide in nobody, you see.”

Dick merely waited, confident that the rest of it would soon be forthcoming now.

“And yet,” said Greatorex, stopping short and fixing Dick with a piercing glance, “if you would do it, you would be far better fitted to carry the thing through than I, with your experience.”

Ah, a burglary, thought Dick. “Try me,” he said aloud.

Greatorex snatched up the photograph, and gazed at it with heart-broken eyes. He ought to be on the stage, thought Dick. “Would you risk something to save the most beautiful woman in England?” Greatorex cried dramatically.

“I reckon,” drawled Dick.

“Poor Millicent!” mourned Greatorex, still gazing at the photograph; “like all the Greatorexes she is fatally reckless. We’re decadent, I suppose. The family is too old. You don’t know these high-bred English women of course; when they get the bit between their teeth, there is no stopping them. If she had been happy in her marriage it would never have happened. . . . Well, I have decided to tell you all now. Whatever your past may have been, there is something about you that has won my confidence, Kid—if that is what I must call you.

“Same here, Lord,” said Dick.

“Oh, call me Greatorex, as between man and man. What does rank amount to? . . . Besides,” he went on, dropping the histrionics for the moment; “there’s a thousand pounds in it for you, Kid, if you carry the thing through.”

“Oh, don’t mention that, old man,” said Dick.

“I must tell you,” Greatorex went on, “that my poor sister lost her head over an American adventurer called Michael Rulon. Ever hear of him?”

Dick shook his head, and Greatorex looked relieved. “Well, when you see him,” he went on, “you will wonder what there could be about him to attract a woman like Millicent. You never can tell. There is some fatal attraction there. . . . The long and the short of it is, that this scoundrel Rulon took advantage of the poor girl’s infatuation to steal the Brentford pearls from about her neck! Oh! my blood simply boils when I think of it! Hanging is too good for such a man! He ought to be drawn and quartered!”

“You said a mouthful!” said Dick.

“We can’t have the man arrested without disgracing my sister,” Greatorex resumed. “On the other hand, the loss of the pearls cannot long be kept hidden from her husband, and she’ll be disgraced anyway. The only thing I could think of was to steal them back from that scoundrel. Would you blame me?”

“Absolutely not,” said Dick.

“He is stopping at the Chester. He is booked to return to America on the Baratoria on Wednesday. We have just three days. Well, I am blocked now. Will you act in my place, Kid? You can have all the assistance you need on the outside.”

Dick was thinking fast. He did not believe a word of this romantic story, of course. Gee! he must think eagles are downy birds! he thought. Stripped of its embroidery, this was just a plain, everyday robbery that was proposed. Rulon was undoubtedly the rightful owner of the pearls. In that case he must be a rich man. Dick’s best line was to seem to accept, and then tip the American off. He, Dick, owed these English crooks nothing. And blood was thicker than water. And besides, his grateful countryman ought to be glad to do something for him.

“All right,” said Dick laconically. “I’m on.”

4

Dick and Greatorex lunched at the Cheshire Cheese in Fleet street. Every visitor to London must see that ancient tavern where old Sam Johnson used to rule the roast, Greatorex said. The two were now as thick as—well, thieves, Dick thought with an inward chuckle. It is probable that Greatorex suspected Dick did not believe the romantic yarn he had told him, but he did not greatly care. Greatorex enjoyed romanticising for its own sake, even when no longer necessary.

After they had discussed the beefsteak and kidney pudding, they set about the pleasant business of shopping for Dick’s outfit. Nothing but the best of everything would suite Greatorex; kit-bag; dressing-case; several changes of linen; cravats. Greatorex lent Dick one of his own suits. It would not fit him of course; he was not supposed to put it on; it was packed in the kit-bag merely for the purpose of impressing the servants of the hotel. Meanwhile Greatorex had Dick order a new suit from a fashionable tailor in Conduit street. It was highly agreeable to be dashing hither and thither about London. Shillings and half-crowns flowed like water from Greatorex’s hand into the palms of taxi-drivers.

In only one respect was Greatorex disposed to be niggardly. He kept Dick pretty short of cash. “You won’t need it at the Chester,” he said. “Just sign for anything you want.”

Finally Dick set off in a taxi-cab by himself, with his kit-bag at his feet. He was plagued by a nagging anxiety respecting the clerks at the Chester. Suppose they remembered his asking about Greatorex, and had watched him follow the Englishman? Dick naturally, had not said anything to Greatorex about what he had learned from the clerk. However, as luck would have it, Filbert and the others were in the lounge of the Chester when Dick walked in. They were glad to be friends now; they hailed Dick as one of themselves; and this immediately established him as a rich young American.

Dick was promptly shown to a room. It was on the seventh floor in the back of the house, and shared in that famous view over the Embankment gardens and the misty Thames. It was more inviting than the rooms of American hotels ever are. Dick looked around him with a comfortable feeling of proprietorship, and tipped the apple-cheeked bell-hop a shilling. I’m lodged here sooner than I expected, thought Dick.

Having disposed his things, he set out again to meet Greatorex at the bar of the Strand Palace near-by. Greatorex had now to identify Michael Rulon to him. In the crowded bar Dick found a shabby little customer in the company of his elegant friend, whom Greatorex carelessly introduced as “Hawkins.” “Hawkins has been doing a bit of detective work for me,” he said.

Hawkins was remarkable only for his bad teeth and his cringing manner. In England apparently class distinctions were maintained even in the underworld. It appeared from his talk that this detective work consisted of trailing Rulon. “He’s on the look-out for trouble,” said Hawkins, “and he’s been stickin’ close to his hotel. However, this afternoon he went out to the Tivoli, the big picture palace across the way, yonder, and he’s in there now. The afternoon performance is out at ten minutes to five. If the American gentleman will come with me to a certain little eating house Rulon’s got to pass on his way to his hotel, we’ll get a seat in the window, and I’ll point him out as he goes by.”

“Stow this in your pouch, Kid,” said Greatorex, as they were about to leave him. “The pearls were on an endless string thirty-six inches long; that is to say, two yards of pearls if the string was cut. They’re not the largest, but they’re amongst the finest matched and coloured in Europe. Do you know anything about pearls?”

Dick shook his head.

“Well, even so, you could tell at a glance that these were something exceptional. When we saw them last they were contained in a thin box about four by eight, covered with green leather. It is possible that Rulon may have deposited them in the hotel safe, but I think not. His conscience is bad. He is almost certain to carry them on his person. He may have the box in his pocket; or he may have thrown away the box, and hung the string around his neck.

“I want you if possible to satisfy yourself of the fact that he has the pearls on his person. If he has, chum up with him, you have a winning way with you, and try to get him to accompany you to a little supper club called the Raquets Court in Pentland Mews, number 11. Write that down. If you can get him there, I and my friends will take care of the rest. We will be waiting there any time after eleven to-night and to-morrow night, just on the chance of your fetching him.”

A little shiver chased itself down Dick’s spine, and up again. What is this, murder? he asked himself.

The little lunch-room to which Hawkins took him was German in its character. Apparently London was as cosmopolitan in its eating-houses as New York. There was a big plate glass window looking out on the Strand, and they took seats which commanded a good view through this, but not too close to it. Tall, slender glasses of Pilsner and smoked salmon sandwiches were set before them.

When Hawkins whispered: “There he goes; there! Him with the black hat”; Dick received a queer start. He had expected to see—well, a prosperous, paunchy business man; a trust magnate, say; or a successful operator in oil, returning home with a handsome present for the wife: but this was a figure with a sinister quality that struck a terror to his breast. A tall, well-set-up man, whose chest measurement was noticeable greater than his waist, and who walked on the ball of his feet like a panther or an athlete; handsomely dressed in a quiet style, the whole topped with a modish derby; comely in the face, but with a hard, dry effect; lean, yellow cheeks. It was impossible to say how old he was; under the smart derby he looked thirty-five; but he was certainly older; that icy stare was ageless. He had the look of a gambler; a desperado.

All Dick’s facile theories about this case collapsed. For a moment he wondered wildly if Greatorex’s tale might not after all be true. But he dismissed that possibility; he had received too many intimations to the contrary. What was the truth, then? No answer was forthcoming. The part that he had designed to play, suddenly became meaningless. The idea of “warning” such a man, who, obviously, walked tip-toe in the expectation of danger, was merely silly. Silly, too, the hope of receiving an easy reward from the possessor of that stony face.

But it was too late to turn back. Dick was aware that little Hawkins was watching him keenly. No doubt but what the gang meant to keep him under surveillance henceforward.

“A tough bird, that!” said Dick with a laugh, to disarm Hawkins.

The little man smiled evilly. “Yes,” he said, “they’re all afeared of him.” Evidently he was pleased by the discomfiture of better men than himself.

“Oh, I’ve dealt with his kind before this,” said Dick loftily. “He trades on the hard-boiled effect. That bluff can be called as well as any.”

“Yes,” said Hawkins, smiling still in his spiteful and cringing manner. Dick would have liked to smash him.

5

From his post of observation in an obscure corner of the lounge, Dick saw Michael Rulon descend to the men’s restaurant for his dinner. He followed. Messrs. Filbert et al, whose friendly attentions had now become rather embarrassing to Dick, were out of the way for the moment, having gone to don their dinner coats, so they could sit in the main restaurant, and overlook the girls.

In the smoking room, as it was called in this hotel, Rulon chose a little table with the panelled wall at his side. Dick sat in the centre of the room, and a little behind him, where he could watch his man without himself attracting his attention. He was impressed anew with the man’s power. He had shoulders on him like a mantelpiece. True to his upbringing, Rulon ordered a great beefsteak which was served half raw, followed by pie. He stoked it silently, looking neither to the right nor the left.

What does such a man think about? Dick wondered. The spectacle of one so perfectly self-contained, made the youngster feel sophomorish and frothy. He doesn’t give a damn! Dick thought with a sort of awe. How foolish for a kid like you to think of handling such a case-hardened guy! But Dick couldn’t leave him alone, either; the man fascinated him. Dick had no working plan now; but only an overmastering desire to learn the inwardness of this situation.

After he had finished eating, Rulon sat on, smoking long black cigars, and ordering up one double Scotch after another. He drank his whisky straight. Sipping his ginger ale, Dick watched him put down the potent spirit with growing astonishment. Apparently it had not the least effect. Rulon betrayed no interest in his surroundings, but kept his head slightly lowered as if brooding on his own thoughts. It must be getting him, Dick thought. I know the type. Whisky makes him quieter and quieter, but he’s like a raging furnace inside. A word may set him off.

A long time passed. Dick could not leave Rulon alone. The thought of bracing that lowering desperado gave him the cold shivers, but he knew he would have to do it in the end. Dick never had been able to take a dare from himself. Once a dangerous thought suggested itself, it teased him until he gave it its way. After several false starts, he got up with a fast beating heart and making a detour around the room, shaped a course that would bring him back alongside Rulon’s table.

“Hello, you’re an American,” he said.

Rulon slowly raised his sullen glance. “Well, what of it?” he said coolly.

“So’m I,” said Dick, pulling his well-known cheerful idiot stuff, “and as the two of us seem to be playing the title rôle in Alone in London, I thought . . .”

“I don’t feel the need of company,” said Rulon with a hard look.

Dick, all panicky inside, nevertheless sat down opposite the other. “Oh, you can’t strike me,” he said. “I used to sell lightning rods. What are you drinking?”

Rulon stared at him grimly and queerly. Evidently he was not accustomed to be thus bearded by youth. Evidently it amused him rather. “Double Scotch,” he growled. “The damn stuff is watered.”

“Double Scotch for my friend,” said Dick to the waiter. “Bring me the same as I had before.”

Dick perceived that Rulon, lacking his hat, was at least twenty years older than he had appeared on the street. But marvellously well preserved. It was only his expression that revealed a half a century of cruelty and cynicism. To look straight into his face was like getting a glimpse of hell. The influence of the whisky was apparent, too. He was poisoned with it. His eyes were bloodshot and full of subconscious pain, and his lip curled. If I said the wrong word he’d think nothing of leaning across the table, and smashing my skull with a blow, thought Dick.

“Well, it’s good to hear the old twang,” said Dick, hoping that his voice did not sound as hollow as he felt.

“Huh! there’s no lack of it around here,” rumbled Rulon. “This joint is run exclusively for American suckers. Makes me tired the way they rush over here and ask the English to do them.”

“Well, you’re here,” said Dick.

“I come here to make money out of the English, not to spend it on them.”

“What’s your business?” asked Dick with great carelessness.

Rulon held his glass up to the light, and simply ignored the question.

Dick’s heart missed a beat in sheer fright. Ah, go slow! go slow! he warned himself.

It occurred to Dick that the best way to lead a man to talk about himself, is to talk about yourself. “I’m flat broke,” he said with a laugh.

“I don’t lend money,” said Rulon cooly.

“Wasn’t asking you for any,” said Dick. “I’ll get a cable to-morrow. I only mentioned it to explain why I had to hang around this hotel all evening, where I can sign cheques.”

Rulon was perfectly indifferent to Dick’s affairs. “You don’t have to pay for mine,” he said, holding up his finger for another.

“We’ve pretty near got the place to ourselves now,” said Dick, glancing around. “Everybody’s gone to a show or something. That’s what attracted my attention to you. Why should a man stick around home unless he’s broke.”

“Aah! what has London got to show to a man like me?” growled Rulon. “London’s a sort of doll’s town, all so proper and cleaned up. The police are the bosses of London. The people’s spirit is broke. It’s not what I call a man’s town.”

“What’s your home town? Chicago?” asked Dick.

Rulon cooly stared Dick down, and did not reply.

Nevertheless Dick was assured that he was making progress. He rattled on. The mere fact that Rulon tolerated his impudence gave him heart. Dick was accustomed to having people like him. Good looks are a passport everywhere. By and by Rulon growled:

“Bright as a newly-minted dime, ain’t yeh?”

It was said with a sneer, yet he meant it too. Indeed a sort of irascible fondness began to appear in Rulon’s bloodshot eye. I’ve got him going, thought Dick. Dick was sensible of the fact that it was more dangerous to have Rulon like him, than to be indifferent. Like making friends with a tiger.

Later still, Rulon, now pretty drunk, but still holding himself stiff and wary, said: “Say Kid, stick around to-morrow, will yeh? Whether your cable comes or not, I’ll buy you all you want to drink. Makes the time pass. I’m fair sick of this hole. And I got three more days to put in, before my ship sails.”

“Sure thing! Anything to oblige a good hundred-per-center!” said Dick. “But why stick around the hotel?”

“Because I choose to,” said Rulon with his hard stare.

“Well, you needn’t jump down my throat,” said Dick. “It’s nothing to me one way or the other.”

Rulon grunted.

“I like to walk around this town,” Dick went on in his giddy fashion. “They have such swell layouts in the store windows. Take that cluttered-up alley they called Bond street. Talk about your diamonds and pearls. I never saw anything in New York like that.”

“What do you know about pearls?” growled Rulon, with a sharp look.

“Not a thing in the world!” said Dick with an innocent air. “But you gotta admit they’re pretty to look at. I’d like right well to hang a string of them ‘round my girl’s neck if I had the price.”

“Yes,” rumbled Rulon, scowling, “there’s hundreds of thousands in pearls displayed in those windows along Bond street, and not a crook in London with nerve enough to heave a brick through the glass. It’s never been done.”

“Well, let’s you and I try it on, just to create a little excitement,” said Dick.

Rulon only growled inarticulately.

“Not but what the phony pearls at a guinea a string look just as good to me!” said Dick flippantly.

“You must be blind,” said Rulon scornfully. “In the fake pearls the shine is only pasted on the outside. In the real ones it comes from the heart of ’em!”

“You seem to know!” said Dick.

“I do know!” said Rulon irascibly. “You asked me what my business was. I’ll tell you. I’m in the jewellery business.”

Dick’s breast tightened up with excitement. “That so?” he said carelessly. He bit his lip to keep from smiling at the picture that rose before his mind’s eye, of the terrible Rulon round-shouldered behind a jeweller’s counter with a watch-repairer’s glass screwed into his eye. More likely his business was done on the other side of the counter, with a gun in his hand. “Where’s your place of business?” asked Dick.

“Don’t need any,” growled Rulon. “I trade on’y on commission. Big orders. Rich man comes to me for a string of pearls and I buy ’em in the market. Sort of broker.”

“That so,” said Dick.

“Want to see something?” said Rulon, glancing cautiously around him. He thrust his hand into the inner breast pocket of his coat, and drew it out with his fingers hooked in a glittering snarl of moon-drops. He cupped the mass of beaming cream globules in his two hands, so that nobody else in the room except Dick could have seen what he held. Dick looked at them with an inward cold shiver. Suppose Rulon repented of his imprudence during the night, and killed him next day just for having seen them. But oh, Heaven! how beautiful they were! A double handful of fairy moons! a myriad little balls of frost heaped in the sinewy brown hands, so delicate and cool, yet glowing too, with a dusky, inward fire.

Rulon was looking down at them with an insane joy. “There’s the real thing!” he rumbled, like a tiger purring. “A hundred thousand dollars, Kid!”

“Oh, for God’s sake put them away!” said Dick. “No wonder you don’t want to walk out in the streets!”