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The International Spy Part 15

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The reader may be excused if he has forgotten a little episode which marked my stay in Petersburg. I had noticed something peculiar and at the same time familiar in the scent of the tobacco smoked by Petrovitch, the financial adventurer whose scheme to enrich himself and a corrupt clique of courtiers out of the spoils of Korea and China was the true cause of the war.

By a ruse I had secured one of the cigarettes, smoked by this dangerous plotter, and having ascertained that it bore the mark _Gregorides, Crown Aa_, had instructed my staff to ascertain the history of this particular make of cigarettes.

While I was resting in my hotel in Tokio, waiting for the reply to my cable, I was honored by a visit from no less a personage than Privy Councillor Katahashi, President of the Imperial Bank of j.a.pan.

"I have come," the Privy Councillor explained as soon as the door was closed, "to express the high sense of your ability and devotion which we all possess, and to ask if it is possible for j.a.pan to secure your services."

Deeply gratified by this proposal, I was obliged to explain that I was already retained in the interest of Russia.

"But what interest?" Mr. Katahashi persisted. "It is clear that you are not acting on behalf of that group which has just succeeded in its purpose of forcing a war."

"That is so," I admitted. "It is no breach of confidence--in fact, I serve my employers by a.s.suring you that my efforts are directed toward peace."

"In that case there can be no antagonism between us, surely. Is it not possible for you and me--I say nothing about our respective Governments--to co-operate for certain purposes?

"I know enough of the conditions which prevail in the Russian Court to feel pretty sure that it was not Nicholas II. who originally sought you out, and entrusted you with this mission," the j.a.panese statesman added.

"At the close of the last war in this part of the world," the Privy Councillor went on, "j.a.pan was robbed of the fruit of her victories by an alliance of three Powers, Russia, Germany, and France. This time we know that England will support us against any such combination. Thanks to King Edward VII. we have nothing to fear. His diplomacy, moreover, has secured the powerful influence of France on the side of peace. Although nominally allied with the Czar, we know that the French Government is determined to limit the area of the war, and to take no part against us, except in one event."

"You mean," I put in, "in the event of an attack by England on Russia."

"Exactly. And therefore we know that King Edward is making it his particular care that no cause of conflict shall arise."

He paused, and glanced at me as though he considered that he had sufficiently indicated the source from which my instructions were received.

I contented myself with bowing.

"We know, also, that the most restless and ambitious of living monarchs has been bending his whole thoughts and schemes, ever since he ascended the throne, to one supreme end--the overthrow of the British Empire by a grand combination of all the other Powers of the world. If that monarch can force on a general strife in which England will be involved on the side of j.a.pan, while practically every other European Power is leagued against her, M. Petrovitch and his timber concessions will have done their work."

I drew a deep breath as I looked at the j.a.panese statesman with a questioning gaze.

As if in answer to my unspoken query, a waiter of the hotel knocked at the door in the same moment, and brought me the long-expected cable from my agent in Europe.

I tore it open and read:

Cigarettes Gregorides Crown Aa special brand manufactured to order of Marx, Berlin, tobacconist to German Emperor.

I looked up from reading the telegram to see the eyes of the j.a.panese Privy Councillor fixed upon me with the inscrutable, penetrating gaze of the Oriental.

"The message you have just received bears on the subject of our conversation, does it not?" he inquired, but in the tone of one who does not doubt what the answer will be.

With the caution which has become a habit with me, I read the cable through carefully for the second time, and then placed it on the fire, where it was instantly consumed.

The j.a.panese statesman smiled.

"You forget, I think, M. V----, that you have come here as the emissary of a sovereign with whom we are at war, and that, consequently, we cannot afford to respect your privacy.

"I have a copy in my pocket," he went on urbanely. "You have felt some curiosity about a particular brand of cigarettes, and your friends have just informed you that they are those supplied to the German Emperor."

I looked at Mr. Katahashi with new respect.

"Your secret service is well managed, sir," I observed.

"Such a compliment from such a quarter is an ample reward for what little pains I may have taken."

"Then it is you who are----?"

"The organizer of our secret service during the war?--I am."

"But you are a banker?" I turned my eyes to the card by which Mr.

Katahashi had announced his visit.

The j.a.panese gave another of his subtle smiles--those peculiar smiles of the Oriental which make the keenest-witted man of the West feel that he is little better than a blunderer.

"I came here prepared to take you into my confidence," he said gravely. "I am well aware that it is the only safe course in dealing with the Bismarck of underground diplomacy.

"I am equally well aware," the Privy Councillor added, "that a secret confided to Monsieur V---- is as safe as if it had been told in confidence to a priest of Buddha, for whom the penalty of betrayal is to be flayed alive."

CHAPTER XII

THE SECRET SERVICE OF j.a.pAN

"Three years ago," Mr. Katahashi proceeded, "when we first recognized that j.a.pan would be obliged to fight Russia for her existence as a free and independent country, his imperial majesty the Mikado appointed me head of the intelligence department.

"I perceived that it would be necessary for me to establish centers in the chief European capitals, and to have at my command a corps of agents whose comings and goings would not attract the attention that is usually given to the movements of persons connected with the staff of an emba.s.sy.

"In our case precautions were necessary which would not have been recognized in the case of another country.

"On the one hand, our Government has laid to heart the profound advice of Herbert Spencer, that whatever is done for j.a.pan should be done by j.a.panese.

"On the other hand, our people have characteristic racial features which make it practically impossible for a j.a.panese to disguise himself as a Western European, so as to deceive European eyes.

"It was therefore necessary to provide an excuse for distributing j.a.panese agents over the West without the true reason of their presence being known.

"I solved this problem by founding the Imperial Bank of j.a.pan."

"But, surely!" I exclaimed, "the Imperial Bank of j.a.pan is a _bona fide_ concern? Its shares are regularly quoted on the stock exchanges. It negotiates loans, and carries on the ordinary business of a bank?"

"Certainly. Why not? You forget that j.a.pan is not a rich country.

What we lack in gold, we are obliged to make up in ingenuity and devotion. Thanks to this idea of mine, the secret service of j.a.pan pays for itself, and even earns a small profit."

It gave me something like a cold shock to comprehend the character of this people whom the Russians had so recklessly provoked to draw the sword.

I thought of the intelligence departments of some Western Powers, of the rank corruption that reigned on the Neva, where every secret had its price; of the insane conceit of Berlin, which had forgotten nothing and learned nothing since the days of Moltke; of the luxurious laziness of Pall Mall, where superannuated soldiers dozed in front of their dusty pigeon-holes after apoplectic lunches, and exercised their wits chiefly in framing evasive answers suited to the intelligence of the House of Commons.

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The International Spy Part 15 summary

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