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Then came another mishap. The two men were murmuring their obviously insincere regrets when Ellen entered and said the Prince von Graven wished to see me.
"Show him up," I said, with a sort of feeling that nothing mattered now.
Von Felsen gave such a leer of triumph that I could have kicked him.
"He is, indeed, an ultimate friend of yours, Bastable. Two visits in one day"; and with that the two men went, meeting the Prince on the landing.
"I could almost cry with vexation," whispered Bessie.
"It's too serious for tears, Bess. Was Althea coming down here?"
She nodded. "I was just in time to stop her."
"She might almost as well have come," I grunted. "You had better leave me alone with the Prince. Try and persuade Althea to make a bolt of it."
The interview with the Prince was very short. Eagerness to learn the result of my visit to Chalice had brought him together with the desire to tell me he had found out that the arrest was not ordered by the Kaiser, who knew nothing about it. I told him what had pa.s.sed between Chalice and myself.
"I was afraid of it; but of course she must have her own way," he declared feebly.
"Do you think she has the right to ruin Fraulein Althea, then?"
"It is most perplexing, baffling. I do not see what to do."
"Not to tell the truth is simply cowardly," I said with some warmth.
"Herr Bastable!" and he drew himself up to his full height.
"To place one woman in danger merely for another woman's caprice is cowardly, Prince von Graven. And you are chiefly responsible."
"Do you speak in this way with Fraulein Althea's sanction?"
"On the contrary, she is all too willing to sacrifice herself."
"Then it is scarcely pertinent to the matter."
"Pertinent or impertinent, it is the truth," I declared bluntly, disgusted at his indifference to Althea's welfare.
"Are you seeking to force a quarrel upon me, sir?"
"No. I am merely trying to rouse you to do what you ought to do."
"I am the best judge of that."
"Then we may as well end the interview"; and I threw open the door.
He was bursting with indignation. "I am extremely disappointed in you, Herr Bastable."
"A mutual feeling, I a.s.sure you, Prince"; and I bowed him out.
I was glad to be rid of him. His news--that the arrest was not at the Kaiser's bidding--confirmed my belief that I must deal with von Felsen as the chief instigator, and I must lose no time in getting to work to checkmate him.
I knew a good deal about him. He had lived a wastrel, dissipated life, and was deep in the hands of the Jews; and the fact that I had seen him with Hagar Ziegler led me to think I could get from her father what I wanted--something discreditable which would enable me to pull him up short.
Old Ephraim Ziegler was under a considerable obligation to me. During my newspaper work I had refrained from taking a certain line in regard to a very dirty transaction in which he was concerned, and had saved the old Jew from being prosecuted. He knew this, and had more than once expressed himself anxious to show me some practical appreciation of that service.
I was shown at once into his office, and he received me with more than unctuous servility.
"Ah, Herr Bastable, this is indeed an honour," he said, rubbing his fat hands together while his beady eyes searched my face in doubt whether I had again come to undo some of his questionable work.
"So you haven't forgotten me?"
"Forgotten you!" he cried, spreading wide his arms. "You are one of the only friends poor Ephraim Ziegler ever had. You come on business? A little money, eh?"
I shook my head. "Oh no, not that."
This disconcerted him somewhat. He jumped to the conclusion that it must be something unpleasant. I let him think that for a while and, referring to one of the former cases, hinted that I had come to warn him, and that something had been discovered which might mean trouble for him. But I ended with an a.s.surance that personally I would not do anything against him. Then I rose as if to leave.
He trembled and was very frightened; his flabby cheeks paled, and his voice shook as he pressed me to stay. "It is such an honour you do me,"
he declared. Thus pressed, I resumed my seat, and we chatted about a number of matters until I brought the talk round to von Felsen, mentioning his name casually among several others. "He's one of the flies in your web, you old spider," I laughed.
"He owes me a lot of money, that young man," he said. It was his habit to gloat over his cunning in such matters. "But it will be all right in the end."
"Where's he to get it from to pay you? Not from his father."
"Not from his father; that is true. But he will get it, he will get it"; and he sat pressing his finger-tips together with such an air of satisfaction that it set me thinking. I remembered that he was a Pole, and had been mixed up once before with one of the Polish schemes.
"There are other things beside money to pay debts with, eh?" I put all the significance I could into the question, and winked at him. "You old fox!"
"You almost make me afraid of you, Herr Bastable. You get to know so much," he answered after a pause, and with a leer intended to flatter me.
"Would you like to know what I do know about this?" I laughed. "Your 'almost' would then be 'quite,' I a.s.sure you"; and I rose again as if to leave.
"Oh no, no. Don't go yet," he cried eagerly.
Down I sat again with a shrug as if to please him. "You want to find out how much I do know, eh? But I did not come to discuss politics"--I paused intentionally on the word, and the effect satisfied me--"but just to warn you about that old Martin affair. You can't pump me; but you'd better go carefully in both concerns."
His uneasiness showed that my old experience with him stood me in good stead now. He had a wholesome fear of my sources of information. He paused, hunched up in his chair, and asked suddenly: "Why did you mention Hugo von Felsen's name to me?"
I had an inspiration and resolved upon a shot. I took out my cigarette case, selected one with great care, and as I lit it, looked across at him. "Your daughter is a very handsome girl, Ziegler."
The shot told instantly. "You mean something. Herr Bastable," he cried, leaning forward in his eagerness. "You are my friend. You must tell me. I love my Hagar. She is the light of my life. Tell me," he repeated.
I wished with all my heart that I could; but I could only look as if my secret knowledge would fill an encyclopaedia.
This spurred his eagerness. "Ah, my friend, my dear Herr Bastable, you must tell me," he urged.
I shook my head. "You are a very clever old spider but--some one is blabbing. Look out." It was a safe general sort of shot and added to his mystification. He bit his nails and his eyes rolled from side to side rapidly. It was his way when deeply moved. "Do you mean about Hagar?" he asked at length.
I knew by this that there was something more important than Hagar behind. He would always put the less important consideration in front.