登陆注册
19556300000094

第94章

The letter in his hand crackled under his clenched fist.He stared at it in a half-blind, half-bitter way.The call of the Gray Seal to arms! Another coup, with its incident danger and peril, that she had planned for him to execute! He could have laughed aloud at the inhuman mockery of it.The call of the Gray Seal to arms--NOW!

When with every faculty drained to its last resource, cornered, trapped, he was fighting for his very existence!

"Jimmie, it is half-past eleven now--HURRY!" The words were jangling discordantly in his brain.

And now he laughed outright, mirthlessly.A young girl hanging on her escort's arm, passing, glanced at him and giggled.It was a different Jimmie Dale for the moment.For once his immobility had forsaken him.He laughed again--a sort of unnatural, desperate indifference to everything falling upon him.What did it matter, the moment or two it would take to read the letter? He looked around him.He was on the corner in front of the Palace Saloon, and, turning abruptly, he stepped in through the swinging doors.As Larry the Bat, he knew the place well.At the rear of the barroom and along the side of the wall were some half dozen little stalls, partitioned off from each other.Several of these were unoccupied, and he chose the one farthest from the entrance.It was private enough; no one would disturb him.

From the aproned individual who presented himself he ordered a drink.The man returned in a moment, and Jimmie Dale tossed a coin on the table, bidding the other keep the change.He wanted no drink; the transaction was wholly perfunctory.The waiter was gone;he pushed the glass away from him, and tore the envelope open.

A single sheet, closely written on both sides of the paper, was in his hand.It was her writing; there was no mistaking that, but every word, every line bore evidence of frantic haste.Even that customary formula, "dear philanthropic crook," that had prefaced every line she had ever written him before, had been omitted.His eyes traversed the first few lines with that strange indifference that had settled upon him.What, after all, did it matter what it was; he could do nothing--not even save himself probably.And then, with a little start, he read the lines over again, muttering snatches from them.

"...Max Diestricht--diamonds--the Ross-Logan stones--wedding--sliding panel in wall of workshop--end of the room near window--ten boards to the right from side wall--press small knot in the wood in the centre of the tenth board--to-night..."It brought a sudden thrill of excitement to Jimmie Dale that, impossible as he would have believed it an instant ago, for the moment overshadowed the realisation of his own peril.A robbery such as that, if it were ever accomplished, would stir the country from end to end; it would set New York by the ears; it would loose the police in full cry like a pack of bloodhounds with their leashes slipped.The society columns of the newspapers had been busy for months featuring the coming marriage of the Ross-Logans' daughter to one of the country's young merchant princes.The combined fortunes of the two families would make the young couple the richest in America.The prospective groom's wedding gift was to be a diamond necklace of perfectly matched, large stones that would eclipse anything of the kind in the country.Europe, the foreign markets, had been literally combed and ransacked to supply the gems.The stones had arrived in New York the day before, the duty on them alone amounting to over fifty thousand dollars.All this had appeared in the papers.

Jimmie Dale's brows drew together in a frown.On just exactly what percentage the duty was figured he did not know; but it was high enough on the basis of fifty thousand dollars to assume safely that the assessed value of the stones was not less than four times that amount.Two hundred thousand dollars--laid down, a quarter of a million! Well, why not? In more than one quarter diamonds were ranked as the soundest kind of an investment.Furthermore, through personal acquaintance with the "high contracting parties," who were in his own set, he knew it to be true.

He shrugged his shoulders.The papers, too, had thrown the limelight on Max Diestricht, who, though for quite a time the fashion in the social world, had, up to the present, been comparatively unknown to the average New Yorker.His own knowledge of Max Diestricht went deeper than the superficial biography furnished by the newspapers--the old Hollander had done more than one piece of exquisite jewelry work for him.The old fellow was a character that beggared description, eccentric to the point of extravagance, and deaf as a post; but, in craftmanship, a modern Cellini.He employed no workmen, lived alone over his shop on one of the lower streets between Fifth and Sixth Avenues near Washington Square--and possessed a splendid contempt for such protective contrivances as safes and vaults.If his prospective patrons expostulated on this score before intrusting him with their valuables, they were at liberty to take their work elsewhere.It was Max Diestricht who honoured you by accepting the commission; not you who honoured Max Diestricht by intrusting him with it."Of what use is it to me, a safe!" he would exclaim."It hides nothing; it only says, 'I am inside; do not look farther; come and get me!'

Yes? It is to explode with the nitro-glycerin--POUF!--and I am deaf and I hear nothing.It is a foolishness, that"--he had a habit of prodding at one with a levelled fore-finger--"every night somewhere they are robbed, and have I been robbed? HEIN, tell me that; have Ibeen robbed?"

同类推荐
  • 佛说了本生死经

    佛说了本生死经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Studies of Lowell

    Studies of Lowell

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 华严经疏注

    华严经疏注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Gala-Days

    Gala-Days

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 幽梦续影

    幽梦续影

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 新世相专栏

    新世相专栏

    新世相,覆盖千万文艺生活家的自媒体组织"文艺连萌"发起者。提倡品味、审美和有物质基础的精神生活。“4小时逃离北上广”“丢书大作战”“新世相图书馆”等年度刷屏事件策划者。“保持镇静、不被生活吞没,我们终将改变潮水的方向”,他们尝试用文艺解决人间烦恼的样本。
  • 杨洋的明星梦

    杨洋的明星梦

    一个乡村草根的明星梦,一名国际巨星的成名史。
  • 战争游侠

    战争游侠

    “无论你是穿越者,异界人,主神玩家,NPC陆战队,还是高级怪物军团,尽管放马过来!老子座下的坦克履带已经饥.渴难耐了!”是要当英雄还是懦夫?你需要的不仅仅只是勇气!一个年幼无助的孩子,身上背负着改变世界格局的秘密。一名心地善良的游侠,毅然站到孩子面前替她遮挡所有风暴。一组实力强劲的团队,无意间的闯入,让这名英雄得到了所向披靡的力量。这是一部讲述未来战场上的佣兵的故事,也是一名守护者的故事。故事元素:未来都市,超级科技,未来战争,丧尸,怪物,军事,帝国暴风兵,反无限流PS:无限流的轮回者们大概在10万字以后才会出现,请喜欢的朋友不要错过。
  • 张耀明的异界幸福生活

    张耀明的异界幸福生活

    宅男张耀明莫名穿越,附身于异界采药少年身上,回去无望,无奈只有顶着异界少年身份,在这武力至上的异世界生活下去,他在修炼斗气时,无意与前世所学全真功法混合,发生异变,从此艰险无比的修行之路变得顺畅无比。
  • 杂录

    杂录

    热爱考古的青筏大学时期曾跟随考古队勘察过一座古墓,因而得到了一个月牙吊坠。至此,她身上就开始发生各种奇怪事情,更被卷入了一系列不可思议的事件之中。本书轻松欢快,有现代搞怪亦有古风情怀,若能讨客观心喜请关注一下,一起开始我们的故事吧~
  • 大帅夫人太调皮

    大帅夫人太调皮

    初遇在几年前的雨夜,他失去了挚爱,她给了他坚强活下去的理由,只是某些人忘记了,这场相遇的邂逅。第二次从相亲跨越到结婚之时,她已身处于军长大人的“魔掌”中,人生被霸道的改写支配。第三次一榔头过去,击中了军长大人的脸,浅浅来了一句“谁?”忘记了这张脸也忘记了这个人。
  • 血色星辰夜

    血色星辰夜

    平衡世界,被欲望所打破,一切的一切都只是为了与欲望一战!妖王的出现神器的出现魔与神的上位者变更,都被预言之书所记录,一切条件都已达成,你准备好了吗?
  • 万象

    万象

    一面能够照见人心的镜子。不定期更新,永不太监。
  • 好父母决定孩子一生(修订珍藏版)

    好父母决定孩子一生(修订珍藏版)

    当下,很多家长都在为如何教育孩子备感焦虑。从本质上说,孩子的问题是父母的问题。因此,想要孩子变,父母先要改。希望孩子优秀,父母首先要改变观念、态度、原则、方法和行为,成为孩子成长路上的好伴侣、好榜样。书中,作者依据20年亲身实践,将实用的教育学、心理学知识,糅合进一个个精彩生动的案例,倾情分享成为好父母的最有效的教子原则与方法,并以对等交流的方式,逐一解答亲子教育过程中普遍存在的诸多问题,引导父母真正关注孩子、关心孩子、了解孩子,通过自身的改变成功影响自己的孩子。
  • 尼姑抗倭记

    尼姑抗倭记

    一个现代美女演员拒绝导演的潜规则,于是小鞋就来了,在羞愤中她气绝了,却同时出现在一个抗日战争时代的一个农民家里,而此时的她却被二鬼子保安团长选定为准备送给日本人的美女上供,而她的父亲也想攀上她这个高枝,也是同意了保安团长的命令。于是一场追击与逃跑的戏开场了,在最危急的时候,一个有高强武功的老尼救了她,于是一代神尼出世了!一代抗日神尼诞生了!