The Secret Adversary tat-1 Read online

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  "Nothing particular," she replied.

  She felt rather than saw Julius throw a sideways glance at her.

  "Say, shall we go for a spin in the park?"

  "If you like."

  For a while they ran on under the trees in silence. It was a beautiful day. The keen rush through the air brought a new exhilaration to Tuppence.

  "Say, Miss Tuppence, do you think I'm ever going to find Jane?"

  Julius spoke in a discouraged voice. The mood was so alien to him that Tuppence turned and stared at him in surprise. He nodded.

  "That's so. I'm getting down and out over the business. Sir James to-day hadn't got any hope at all, I could see that. I don't like him-we don't gee together somehow-but he's pretty cute, and I guess he wouldn't quit if there was any chance of success-now, would he?"

  Tuppence felt rather uncomfortable, but clinging to her belief that Julius also had withheld something from her, she remained firm.

  "He suggested advertising for the nurse," she reminded him.

  "Yes, with a 'forlorn hope' flavour to his voice! No-I'm about fed up. I've half a mind to go back to the States right away."

  "Oh no!" cried Tuppence. "We've got to find Tommy."

  "I sure forgot Beresford," said Julius contritely. "That's so. We must find him. But after-well, I've been day-dreaming ever since I started on this trip-and these dreams are rotten poor business. I'm quit of them. Say, Miss Tuppence, there's something I'd like to ask you."

  "Yes?"

  "You and Beresford. What about it?"

  "I don't understand you," replied Tuppence with dignity, adding rather inconsequently: "And, anyway, you're wrong!"

  "Not got a sort of kindly feeling for one another?"

  "Certainly not," said Tuppence with warmth. "Tommy and I are friends-nothing more."

  "I guess every pair of lovers has said that sometime or another," observed Julius.

  "Nonsense!" snapped Tuppence. "Do I look the sort of girl that's always falling in love with every man she meets?"

  "You do not. You look the sort of girl that's mighty often getting fallen in love with!"

  "Oh!" said Tuppence, rather taken aback. "That's a compliment, I suppose?"

  "Sure. Now let's get down to this. Supposing we never find Beresford and-and--"

  "All right-say it! I can face facts. Supposing he's-dead! Well?"

  "And all this business fiddles out. What are you going to do?"

  "I don't know," said Tuppence forlornly.

  "You'll be darned lonesome, you poor kid."

  "I shall be all right," snapped Tuppence with her usual resentment of any kind of pity.

  "What about marriage?" inquired Julius. "Got any views on the subject?"

  "I intend to marry, of course," replied Tuppence. "That is, if"-she paused, knew a momentary longing to draw back, and then stuck to her guns bravely-"I can find some one rich enough to make it worth my while. That's frank, isn't it? I dare say you despise me for it."

  "I never despise business instinct," said Julius. "What particular figure have you in mind?"

  "Figure?" asked Tuppence, puzzled. "Do you mean tall or short?"

  "No. Sum-income."

  "Oh, I-I haven't quite worked that out."

  "What about me?"

  "You?"

  "Sure thing."

  "Oh, I couldn't!"

  "Why not?"

  "I tell you I couldn't."

  "Again, why not?"

  "It would seem so unfair."

  "I don't see anything unfair about it. I call your bluff, that's all. I admire you immensely, Miss Tuppence, more than any girl I've ever met. You're so darned plucky. I'd just love to give you a real, rattling good time. Say the word, and we'll run round right away to some high-class jeweller, and fix up the ring business."

  "I can't," gasped Tuppence.

  "Because of Beresford?"

  "No, no, NO!"

  "Well then?"

  Tuppence merely continued to shake her head violently.

  "You can't reasonably expect more dollars than I've got."

  "Oh, it isn't that," gasped Tuppence with an almost hysterical laugh. "But thanking you very much, and all that, I think I'd better say no."

  "I'd be obliged if you'd do me the favour to think it over until to-morrow."

  "It's no use."

  "Still, I guess we'll leave it like that."

  "Very well," said Tuppence meekly.

  Neither of them spoke again until they reached the Ritz.

  Tuppence went upstairs to her room. She felt morally battered to the ground after her conflict with Julius's vigorous personality. Sitting down in front of the glass, she stared at her own reflection for some minutes.

  "Fool," murmured Tuppence at length, making a grimace. "Little fool. Everything you want-everything you've ever hoped for, and you go and bleat out 'no' like an idiotic little sheep. It's your one chance. Why don't you take it? Grab it? Snatch at it? What more do you want?"

  As if in answer to her own question, her eyes fell on a small snapshot of Tommy that stood on her dressing-table in a shabby frame. For a moment she struggled for self-control, and then abandoning all presence, she held it to her lips and burst into a fit of sobbing.

  "Oh, Tommy, Tommy," she cried, "I do love you so-and I may never see you again…"

  At the end of five minutes Tuppence sat up, blew her nose, and pushed back her hair.

  "That's that," she observed sternly. "Let's look facts in the face. I seem to have fallen in love-with an idiot of a boy who probably doesn't care two straws about me." Here she paused. "Anyway," she resumed, as though arguing with an unseen opponent, "I don't KNOW that he does. He'd never have dared to say so. I've always jumped on sentiment-and here I am being more sentimental than anybody. What idiots girls are! I've always thought so. I suppose I shall sleep with his photograph under my pillow, and dream about him all night. It's dreadful to feel you've been false to your principles."

  Tuppence shook her head sadly, as she reviewed her backsliding.

  "I don't know what to say to Julius, I'm sure. Oh, what a fool I feel! I'll have to say SOMETHING-he's so American and thorough, he'll insist upon having a reason. I wonder if he did find anything in that safe--"

  Tuppence's meditations went off on another tack. She reviewed the events of last night carefully and persistently. Somehow, they seemed bound up with Sir James's enigmatical words…

  Suddenly she gave a great start-the colour faded out of her face. Her eyes, fascinated, gazed in front of her, the pupils dilated.

  "Impossible," she murmured. "Impossible! I must be going mad even to think of such a thing…"

  Monstrous-yet it explained everything…

  After a moment's reflection she sat down and wrote a note, weighing each word as she did so. Finally she nodded her head as though satisfied, and slipped it into an envelope which she addressed to Julius. She went down the passage to his sitting-room and knocked at the door. As she had expected, the room was empty. She left the note on the table.

  A small page-boy was waiting outside her own door when she returned to it.

  "Telegram for you, miss."

  Tuppence took it from the salver, and tore it open carelessly. Then she gave a cry. The telegram was from Tommy!

  Chapter XVI. Further Adventures of Tommy

  FROM a darkness punctuated with throbbing stabs of fire, Tommy dragged his senses slowly back to life. When he at last opened his eyes, he was conscious of nothing but an excruciating pain through his temples. He was vaguely aware of unfamiliar surroundings. Where was he? What had happened? He blinked feebly. This was not his bedroom at the Ritz. And what the devil was the matter with his head?

  "Damn!" said Tommy, and tried to sit up. He had remembered. He was in that sinister house in Soho. He uttered a groan and fell back. Through his almost-closed lids he reconnoitred carefully.

  "He is coming to," remarked a voice very near Tommy's ear. He recognized it at once for that of the be
arded and efficient German, and lay artistically inert. He felt that it would be a pity to come round too soon; and until the pain in his head became a little less acute, he felt quite incapable of collecting his wits. Painfully he tried to puzzle out what had happened. Obviously somebody must have crept up behind him as he listened and struck him down with a blow on the head. They knew him now for a spy, and would in all probability give him short shrift. Undoubtedly he was in a tight place. Nobody knew where he was, therefore he need expect no outside assistance, and must depend solely on his own wits.

  "Well, here goes," murmured Tommy to himself, and repeated his former remark.

  "Damn!" he observed, and this time succeeded in sitting up.

  In a minute the German stepped forward and placed a glass to his lips, with the brief command "Drink." Tommy obeyed. The potency of the draught made him choke, but it cleared his brain in a marvellous manner.

  He was lying on a couch in the room in which the meeting had been held. On one side of him was the German, on the other the villainous-faced doorkeeper who had let him in. The others were grouped together at a little distance away. But Tommy missed one face. The man known as Number One was no longer of the company.

  "Feel better?" asked the German, as he removed the empty glass.

  "Yes, thanks," returned Tommy cheerfully.

  "Ah, my young friend, it is lucky for you your skull is so thick. The good Conrad struck hard." He indicated the evil-faced doorkeeper by a nod. The man grinned.

  Tommy twisted his head round with an effort.

  "Oh," he said, "so you're Conrad, are you? It strikes me the thickness of my skull was lucky for you too. When I look at you I feel it's almost a pity I've enabled you to cheat the hangman."

  The man snarled, and the bearded man said quietly:

  "He would have run no risk of that."

  "Just as you like," replied Tommy. "I know it's the fashion to run down the police. I rather believe in them myself."

  His manner was nonchalant to the last degree. Tommy Beresford was one of those young Englishmen not distinguished by any special intellectual ability, but who are emphatically at their best in what is known as a "tight place." Their natural diffidence and caution fall from them like a glove. Tommy realized perfectly that in his own wits lay the only chance of escape, and behind his casual manner he was racking his brains furiously.

  The cold accents of the German took up the conversation:

  "Have you anything to say before you are put to death as a spy?"

  "Simply lots of things," replied Tommy with the same urbanity as before.

  "Do you deny that you were listening at that door?"

  "I do not. I must really apologize-but your conversation was so interesting that it overcame my scruples."

  "How did you get in?"

  "Dear old Conrad here." Tommy smiled deprecatingly at him. "I hesitate to suggest pensioning off a faithful servant, but you really ought to have a better watchdog."

  Conrad snarled impotently, and said sullenly, as the man with the beard swung round upon him:

  "He gave the word. How was I to know?"

  "Yes," Tommy chimed in. "How was he to know? Don't blame the poor fellow. His hasty action has given me the pleasure of seeing you all face to face."

  He fancied that his words caused some discomposure among the group, but the watchful German stilled it with a wave of his hand.

  "Dead men tell no tales," he said evenly.

  "Ah," said Tommy, "but I'm not dead yet!"

  "You soon will be, my young friend," said the German.

  An assenting murmur came from the others.

  Tommy's heart beat faster, but his casual pleasantness did not waver.

  "I think not," he said firmly. "I should have a great objection to dying."

  He had got them puzzled, he saw that by the look on his captor's face.

  "Can you give us any reason why we should not put you to death?" asked the German.

  "Several," replied Tommy. "Look here, you've been asking me a lot of questions. Let me ask you one for a change. Why didn't you kill me off at once before I regained consciousness?"

  The German hesitated, and Tommy seized his advantage.

  "Because you didn't know how much I knew-and where I obtained that knowledge. If you kill me now, you never will know."

  But here the emotions of Boris became too much for him. He stepped forward waving his arms.

  "You hell-hound of a spy," he screamed. "We will give you short shrift. Kill him! Kill him!"

  There was a roar of applause.

  "You hear?" said the German, his eyes on Tommy. "What have you to say to that?"

  "Say?" Tommy shrugged his shoulders. "Pack of fools. Let them ask themselves a few questions. How did I get into this place? Remember what dear old Conrad said-WITH YOUR OWN PASSWORD, wasn't it? How did I get hold of that? You don't suppose I came up those steps haphazard and said the first thing that came into my head?"

  Tommy was pleased with the concluding words of this speech. His only regret was that Tuppence was not present to appreciate its full flavour.

  "That is true," said the working man suddenly. "Comrades, we have been betrayed!"

  An ugly murmur arose. Tommy smiled at them encouragingly.

  "That's better. How can you hope to make a success of any job if you don't use your brains?"

  "You will tell us who has betrayed us," said the German. "But that shall not save you-oh, no! You shall tell us all that you know. Boris, here, knows pretty ways of making people speak!"

  "Bah!" said Tommy scornfully, fighting down a singularly unpleasant feeling in the pit of his stomach. "You will neither torture me nor kill me."

  "And why not?" asked Boris.

  "Because you'd kill the goose that lays the golden eggs," replied Tommy quietly.

  There was a momentary pause. It seemed as though Tommy's persistent assurance was at last conquering. They were no longer completely sure of themselves. The man in the shabby clothes stared at Tommy searchingly.

  "He's bluffing you, Boris," he said quietly.

  Tommy hated him. Had the man seen through him?

  The German, with an effort, turned roughly to Tommy.

  "What do you mean?"

  "What do you think I mean?" parried Tommy, searching desperately in his own mind.

  Suddenly Boris stepped forward, and shook his fist in Tommy's face.

  "Speak, you swine of an Englishman-speak!" "Don't get so excited, my good fellow," said Tommy calmly. "That's the worst of you foreigners. You can't keep calm. Now, I ask you, do I look as though I thought there were the least chance of your killing me?"

  He looked confidently round, and was glad they could not hear the persistent beating of his heart which gave the lie to his words.

  "No," admitted Boris at last sullenly, "you do not."

  "Thank God, he's not a mind reader," thought Tommy. Aloud he pursued his advantage:

  "And why am I so confident? Because I know something that puts me in a position to propose a bargain."

  "A bargain?" The bearded man took him up sharply.

  "Yes-a bargain. My life and liberty against--" He paused.

  "Against what?"

  The group pressed forward. You could have heard a pin drop.

  Slowly Tommy spoke.

  "The papers that Danvers brought over from America in the Lusitania."

  The effect of his words was electrical. Every one was on his feet. The German waved them back. He leaned over Tommy, his face purple with excitement.

  "Himmel! You have got them, then?"

  With magnificent calm Tommy shook his head.

  "You know where they are?" persisted the German.

  Again Tommy shook his head. "Not in the least."

  "Then-then--" angry and baffled, the words failed him.

  Tommy looked round. He saw anger and bewilderment on every face, but his calm assurance had done its work-no one doubted but that something lay behind his words
.

  "I don't know where the papers are-but I believe that I can find them. I have a theory--"

  "Pah!"

  Tommy raised his hand, and silenced the clamours of disgust.

  "I call it a theory-but I'm pretty sure of my facts-facts that are known to no one but myself. In any case what do you lose? If I can produce the papers-you give me my life and liberty in exchange. Is it a bargain?"

  "And if we refuse?" said the German quietly.

  Tommy lay back on the couch.

  "The 29th," he said thoughtfully, "is less than a fortnight ahead--"

  For a moment the German hesitated. Then he made a sign to Conrad.

  "Take him into the other room."

  For five minutes, Tommy sat on the bed in the dingy room next door. His heart was beating violently. He had risked all on this throw. How would they decide? And all the while that this agonized questioning went on within him, he talked flippantly to Conrad, enraging the cross-grained doorkeeper to the point of homicidal mania.

  At last the door opened, and the German called imperiously to Conrad to return.

  "Let's hope the judge hasn't put his black cap on," remarked Tommy frivolously. "That's right, Conrad, march me in. The prisoner is at the bar, gentlemen."

  The German was seated once more behind the table. He motioned to Tommy to sit down opposite to him.

  "We accept," he said harshly, "on terms. The papers must be delivered to us before you go free."

  "Idiot!" said Tommy amiably. "How do you think I can look for them if you keep me tied by the leg here?"

  "What do you expect, then?" "I must have liberty to go about the business in my own way."

  The German laughed.

  "Do you think we are little children to let you walk out of here leaving us a pretty story full of promises?"

  "No," said Tommy thoughtfully. "Though infinitely simpler for me, I did not really think you would agree to that plan. Very well, we must arrange a compromise. How would it be if you attached little Conrad here to my person. He's a faithful fellow, and very ready with the fist."

 

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