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"He'll want all his hands for himself after this, and you'll stand by his side in the dock--unless you go in the witness box against him.
Tell all you know, and you shall not have five hundred, but a thousand marks."
"They'd have my life."
"Not if you leave the country. I'll add the pa.s.sage money to America.
You're not tough enough for a real scoundrel, you know; and you'll get a fresh start there."
"I shouldn't be in it at all if it weren't for Dragen and the gambling."
"Well, you must make up your mind quickly."
"I'll do it," he said, after another long pause, drawing a deep breath.
"But you must keep me safe from the rest until it's over;" and then he began to tell me.
He said his name was Lander, and that he had been forced into the affair by Dragen. He had been one of the men who had made the search for the papers at my house, and afterwards had played the part of a plain clothes police officer at Hagar's, where he had found out that von Felsen was at the back of everything.
The latter's orders had been to recover possession of the papers at any cost; and when that had been done I was to be kept a close prisoner for a week. But von Felsen's terms had been, no papers no pay; and thus my declaration that they were in safe hands had caused a split and a quarrel; and Lander and one of the others had decided to go back to von Felsen for fresh instructions.
He had barely finished his story when the carriage stopped at von Felsen's house. Remembering that I had found it close shut when I was there before, I was surprised to see lights in several of the windows.
I concluded that he had thought it safe to return there when he knew that I had fallen into Dragen's hands.
We got out and I told Lander to ask for von Felsen and say that we had a message from Dragen; and when the servant opened the door, I stood on one side and kept my face out of the light.
The fellow was inclined to be suspicious; and was going to shut the door in our faces on the pretence of going to call his master when I lurched against Lander, pushed him into the house and followed. Answering the servants' protests with a drunken oath, I staggered to a chair and flopped into it.
He stared at me for a moment, hesitating whether to try and put me out; and then knocked at the door of von Felsen's private room.
The sound of several voices reached us as he opened it; and after a pause von Felsen came out. I let my head loll forward so that he should not at first see my face; and he spoke to Lander. "Who are you, and what do you want?" he asked sharply.
Having no cue from me, the man was at a loss for a reply; so he motioned toward me and muttered something about the papers.
"Turn up the light in the library," he told the servant; and then to us: "Come in here;" and he led the way.
I rose and staggered after them, lurching first against the servant as he came out of the room, and then against von Felsen, who stood holding the door. In this way I shouldered him into the room and then shut the door.
"Who is this drunken beast?" cried von Felsen, as I was fumbling with the door fastening.
Then I turned and faced him and waited for the recognition.
I was not surprised that it did not follow at once. I had on the suit of workman's overalls; they were torn and dishevelled as the result of the scrimmage with Dragen; I was as dirty as a sweep; a soft, rather greasy cloth cap was drawn well down over my face; I was bootless, and had just been a.s.suming drunkenness. I have no doubt I looked a very low grade sort of scoundrel.
"Why do you bring this fellow here?" he demanded of Lander angrily.
"Have another look at me, von Felsen," I said quietly, fixing my eyes on him, and crossing toward him.
He fell back from me as if I were the devil in the flesh and leant against the table behind him, staring at me wide-eyed, breathing hard, deathly white, speechless, and shaking like a jelly.
I was human enough to enjoy his discomfiture, and just stared at him while he tortured himself with the thoughts which my most unwelcome arrival had started. Lander glanced from one to the other of us in perplexity and for more than a minute the tense silence was unbroken.
Then von Felsen clasped his hands to his head with a faint groan of agony.
"Where is Fraulein von Ringheim?" I asked.
At the sound of my voice he glanced up at me and then cowered and shrank like a beaten cur.
The silent gesture chilled me with sudden dread. My confidence and the sense of victory fell away from me like a dropped cloak. I was too late after all. A frenzy of rage seized upon me; I rushed upon him and seizing him by the throat, shook him till his teeth chattered, and flung him away, and sent him asprawl to the ground.
"You shall pay with your life for this," I cried fiercely. "Go for the police, Lander," I said turning to my companion. "Here, take this card to Herr Feldermann;" and I scribbled a message to Feldermann to come.
"No, no, wait," said von Felsen in a weak voice as he struggled to his feet. "Wait till we have talked together."
"We've pa.s.sed the time for talk," I answered with an oath. "Where is Fraulein Althea?"
"Send him away;" and he motioned toward Lander.
"Where is she?" I asked again. "I'm not safe to fool in this mood." I was beside myself with the l.u.s.t for revenge, and could have found it in me to tear the life out of him there and then. "This is the end of things for you."
"I will tell you all. Send him away. She is safe and well."
"Wait in the hall there till I call you," I told Lander; and I unlocked the door, let him out, and relocked it.
"Now you treacherous devil, out with the truth," I thundered. "Have you forced her to marry you? If you have, I swear on my soul that you shall pay for it with your life."
He fell back before me, grey and sweat-dappled with terror.
"For G.o.d's sake!" he exclaimed. "I admit everything."
"Tell me," I stormed.
"She is in the room across there with the others."
"Come then;" and I twisted my fingers into his collar and hauled him toward the door. He hung back and squirmed like a reluctant puppy at the end of the leash.
As we reached it some one knocked sharply on the panels.
"Help! Help! I am being murdered," yelled von Felsen.
"Break in this door," cried a voice.
Keeping my grip on his collar I unlocked the door and threw it open.
Herr Borsen and a couple of strangers rushed in, and at the door of the room opposite stood two women with Althea behind them.
Borsen did not recognize me, and he and the other men were throwing themselves upon me to rescue von Felsen from my clutches when Althea broke past the women and called me by name.
"Bastable!" exclaimed Borsen with a great start of surprise as he held the others in check. "What on earth is the meaning of this?"
I took no notice of him and hurling von Felsen back into the room pushed through to Althea and took her hands.