Ranson's Folly (Fiscle Part 3) - Richard Harding Davis (reading diary .txt) 📗
- Author: Richard Harding Davis
Book online «Ranson's Folly (Fiscle Part 3) - Richard Harding Davis (reading diary .txt) 📗». Author Richard Harding Davis
Despatched To The Home Of Lord Edam, Chetney's Father, With A Warrant
For Lord Arthur's Arrest. I Was Thanked And Dismissed On My Own
Recognizance.
"This Morning, Inspector Lyle Called On Me, And From Him I Learned
The Police Theory Of The Scene I Have Just Described.
"Apparently, I Had Wandered Very Far In The Fog, For Up To Noon To-
Day The House Had Not Been Found, Nor Had They Been Able To Arrest
Lord Arthur. He Did Not Return To His Father's House Last Night, And
There Is No Trace Of Him; But From What The Police Knew Of The Past
Lives Of The People I Found In That Lost House, They Have Evolved A
Theory, And Their Theory Is That The Murders Were Committed By Lord
Arthur.
"The Infatuation Of His Elder Brother, Lord Chetney, For A Russian
Princess, So Inspector Lyle Tells Me, Is Well Known To Everyone.
About Two Years Ago The Princess Zichy, As She Calls Herself, And He
Were Constantly Together, And Chetney Informed His Friends That They
Were About To Be Married. The Woman Was Notorious In Two Continents,
And When Lord Edam Heard Of His Son's Infatuation He Appealed To The
Police For Her Record.
"It Is Through His Having Applied To Them That They Know So Much
Concerning Her And Her Relations With The Chetneys. From The Police
Lord Edam Learned That Madame Zichy Had Once Been A Spy In The Employ
Of The Russian Third Section, But That Lately She Had Been Repudiated
By Her Own Government And Was Living By Her Wits, By Blackmail, And
By Her Beauty. Lord Edam Laid This Record Before His Son, But Chetney
Either Knew It Already Or The Woman Persuaded Him Not To Believe In
It, And The Father And Son Parted In Great Anger. Two Days Later The
Marquis Altered His Will, Leaving All Of His Money To The Younger
Brother, Arthur.
"The Title And Some Of The Landed Property He Could Not Keep From
Chetney, But He Swore If His Son Saw The Woman Again That The Will
Should Stand As It Was, And He Would Be Left Without A Penny.
"This Was About Eighteen Months Ago, When, Apparently, Chetney Tired
Of The Princess, And Suddenly Went Off To Shoot And Explore In
Central Africa. No Word Came From Him, Except That Twice He Was
Reported As Having Died Of Fever In The Jungle, And Finally Two
Traders Reached The Coast Who Said They Had Seen His Body. This Was
Accepted By All As Conclusive, And Young Arthur Was Recognized As The
Part 3 Title 1 (Ranson's Folly) Pg 124Heir To The Edam Millions. On The Strength Of This Supposition He At
Once Began To Borrow Enormous Sums From The Money-Lenders. This Is Of
Great Importance, As The Police Believe It Was These Debts Which
Drove Him To The Murder Of His Brother. Yesterday, As You Know, Lord
Chetney Suddenly Returned From The Grave, And It Was The Fact That
For Two Years He Had Been Considered As Dead Which Lent Such
Importance To His Return And Which Gave Rise To Those Columns Of
Detail Concerning Him Which Appeared In All The Afternoon Papers.
But, Obviously, During His Absence He Had Not Tired Of The Princess
Zichy, For We Know That A Few Hours After He Reached London He Sought
Her Out. His Brother, Who Had Also Learned Of His Reappearance
Through The Papers, Probably Suspected Which Would Be The House He
Would First Visit, And Followed Him There, Arriving, So The Russian
Servant Tells Us, While The Two Were At Coffee In The Drawing-Room.
The Princess, Then, We Also Learn From The Servant, Withdrew To The
Dining-Room, Leaving The Brothers Together. What Happened One Can
Only Guess.
"Lord Arthur Knew Now That When It Was Discovered He Was No Longer
The Heir, The Moneylenders Would Come Down Upon Him. The Police
Believe That He At Once Sought Out His Brother To Beg For Money To
Cover The Post-Obits, But That, Considering The Sum He Needed Was
Several Hundreds Of Thousands Of Pounds, Chetney Refused To Give It
Him. No One Knew That Arthur Had Gone To Seek Out His Brother. They
Were Alone. It Is Possible, Then, That In A Passion Of
Disappointment, And Crazed With The Disgrace Which He Saw Before Him,
Young Arthur Made Himself The Heir Beyond Further Question. The Death
Of His Brother Would Have Availed Nothing If The Woman Remained
Alive. It Is Then Possible That He Crossed The Hall, And, With The
Same Weapon Which Made Him Lord Edam's Heir, Destroyed The Solitary
Witness To The Murder. The Only Other Person Who Could Have Seen It
Was Sleeping In A Drunken Stupor, To Which Fact Undoubtedly He Owed
His Life. And Yet," Concluded The Naval Attache, Leaning Forward And
Marking Each Word With His Finger, "Lord Arthur Blundered Fatally. In
His Haste He Left The Door Of The House Open, So Giving Access To The
First Passer-By, And He Forgot That When He Entered It He Had Handed
His Card To The Servant. That Piece Of Paper May Yet Send Him To The
Gallows. In The Meantime, He Has Disappeared Completely, And
Somewhere, In One Of The Millions Of Streets Of This Great Capital,
In A Locked And Empty House, Lies The Body Of His Brother, And Of The
Woman His Brother Loved, Undiscovered, Unburied; And With Their
Murder Unavenged."
In The Discussion Which Followed The Conclusion Of The Story Of The
Naval Attache, The Gentleman With The Pearl Took No Part. Instead, He
Arose, And, Beckoning A Servant To A Far Corner Of The Room,
Whispered Earnestly To Him Until A Sudden Movement On The Part Of Sir
Andrew Caused Him To Return Hurriedly To The Table.
"There Are Several Points In Mr. Sears's Story I Want Explained," He
Cried. "Be Seated, Sir Andrew," He Begged. "Let Us Have The Opinion
Of An Expert. I Do Not Care What The Police Think, I Want To Know
What You Think."
Part 3 Title 1 (Ranson's Folly) Pg 125
But Sir Andrew Rose Reluctantly From His Chair.
"I Should Like Nothing Better Than To Discuss This," He Said. "But It
Is Most Important That I Proceed To The House. I Should Have Been
There Some Time Ago." He Turned Toward The Servant And Directed Him
To Call A Hansom.
The Gentleman With The Pearl Stud Looked Appealingly At The Naval
Attache. "There Are Surely Many Details That You Have Not Told Us,"
He Urged. "Some You Have Forgotten."
The Baronet Interrupted Quickly.
"I Trust Not," He Said, "For I Could Not Possibly Stop To Hear Them."
"The Story Is Finished," Declared The Naval Attache; "Until Lord
Arthur Is Arrested Or The Bodies Are Found There Is Nothing More To
Tell Of Either Chetney Or The Princess Zichy."
"Of Lord Chetney, Perhaps Not," Interrupted The Sporting-Looking
Gentleman With The Black Tie, "But There'll Always Be Something To
Tell Of The Princess Zichy. I Know Enough Stories About Her To Fill A
Book. She Was A Most Remarkable Woman." The Speaker Dropped The End
Of His Cigar Into His Coffee-Cup And, Taking His Case From His
Pocket, Selected A Fresh One. As He Did So He Laughed And Held Up The
Case That The Others Might See It. It Was An Ordinary Cigar-Case Of
Well-Worn Pig-Skin, With A Silver Clasp.
"The Only Time I Ever Met Her," He Said, "She Tried To Rob Me Of
This."
The Baronet Regarded Him Closely.
"She Tried To Rob You?" He Repeated.
"Tried To Rob Me Of This," Continued The Gentleman In The Black Tie,
"And Of The Czarina's Diamonds." His Tone Was One Of Mingled
Admiration And Injury.
"The Czarina's Diamonds!" Exclaimed The Baronet. He Glanced Quickly
And Suspiciously At The Speaker, And Then At The Others About The
Table. But Their Faces Gave Evidence Of No Other Emotion Than That Of
Ordinary Interest.
"Yes, The Czarina's Diamonds," Repeated The Man With The Black Tie.
"It Was A Necklace Of Diamonds. I Was Told To Take Them To The
Russian Ambassador In Paris, Who Was To Deliver Them At Moscow. I Am
A Queen's Messenger," He Added.
"Oh, I See," Exclaimed Sir Andrew, In A Tone Of Relief. "And You Say
That This Same Princess Zichy, One Of The Victims Of This Double
Murder, Endeavored To Rob You Of--Of--That Cigar-Case."
"And The Czarina's Diamonds," Answered The Queen's Messenger,
Part 3 Title 1 (Ranson's Folly) Pg 126Imperturbably. "It's Not Much Of A Story, But It Gives You An Idea Of
The Woman's Character. The Robbery Took Place Between Paris And
Marseilles."
The Baronet Interrupted Him With An Abrupt Movement. "No, No," He
Cried, Shaking His Head In Protest. "Do Not Tempt Me. I Really Cannot
Listen. I Must Be At The House In Ten Minutes."
"I Am Sorry," Said The Queen's Messenger. He Turned To Those Seated
About Him. "I Wonder If The Other Gentlemen--" He Inquired,
Tentatively. There Was A Chorus Of Polite Murmurs, And The Queen's
Messenger, Bowing His Head In Acknowledgment, Took A Preparatory Sip
From His Glass. At The Same Moment The Servant To Whom The Man With
The Black Pearl Had Spoken, Slipped A Piece Of Paper Into His Hand.
He Glanced At It, Frowned, And Threw It Under The Table.
The Servant Bowed To The Baronet.
"Your Hansom Is Waiting, Sir Andrew," He Said.
"The Necklace Was Worth Twenty Thousand Pounds," Began The Queen's
Messenger, "It Was A Present From The Queen Of England To Celebrate--
" The Baronet Gave An Exclamation Of Angry Annoyance.
"Upon My Word, This Is Most Provoking," He Interrupted. "I Really
Ought Not To Stay. But I Certainly Mean To Hear This." He Turned
Irritably To The Servant. "Tell The Hansom To Wait," He Commanded,
And, With An Air Of A Boy Who Is Playing Truant, Slipped Guiltily
Into His Chair.
The Gentleman With The Black Pearl Smiled Blandly, And Rapped Upon
The Table.
"Order, Gentlemen," He Said. "Order For The Story Of The Queen's
Messenger And The Czarina's Diamonds."
Ii
"The Necklace Was A Present From The Queen Of England To The Czarina
Of Russia," Began The Queen's Messenger. "It Was To Celebrate The
Occasion Of The Czar's Coronation. Our Foreign Office Knew That The
Russian Ambassador In Paris Was To Proceed To Moscow For That
Ceremony, And I Was Directed To Go To Paris And Turn Over The
Necklace To Him. But When I Reached Paris I Found He Had Not Expected
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