The Tragedians by Arthur Conan Doyle
The Tragedians I
The Tragedians II
The Tragedians III
The Tragedians IV

The Tragedians II

It was the same night, or rather the following morning, for the cathedral clock had already struck three. The streets of Paris were deserted, save for an occasional gendarme or a solitary reveller hurrying home from some scene of pleasure.

Even in the Rue d’Anjou (the most dissipated of fashionable streets) there were but few houses which showed a light.

It is to one of these, however, that our story leads us.

In a large room, luxuriously fitted up, half a dozen men in evening dress were lounging and smoking. The great chandelier reflected its lustre cheerily in the mirrors around, and cast a warm glow on the red velvet of the furniture.

The carpet was so thick that hardly a footfall was heard, as one of the men rose from his seat and walked over to lean against the great marble mantelpiece.

Any habitué of the French theatres would have known at a glance who this man was. One could not easily forget the sinewy, upright form, and the dark, cynical smile of Lablas, the foremost tragedian of the Theatre National. A follower of Spurzheim would have prophesied great things, of good or of evil, from that broad, low forehead and massive jaw; and another glance at the cold grey eye and the sensual lip would have warned the physiognomist that off the boards of the National this was a man to be shunned, a selfish friend and a vindictive foe.

Our theatrical habitué would have found some other, and possibly some more agreeable, old acquaintances here.

Over there by the little glittering cabinet was Grossière, from the Variétés, cleverest and most unscrupulous of actors, whose duels and intrigues were only less notorious than those of his host, Lablas. Beside him was a blasé young officer of cavalry, and near him Turville, another well-known actor and “lion.” Reposing on the couch, puffing at a meerschaum pipe, was Cachet, from the Gaieté; while one or two less known actors completed the group.

Lablas looked wearily at the table, all heaped with cards, dice, and odd pieces of coin.

“Well, gentlemen,” he said, “you must please yourselves. Shall we have another turn or not?”

“We have plenty of time yet,” said one of the actors; “but I fear there is such a run of luck against the unfortunate Lieutenant, that he will hardly dare to try again. Positively it is cruel to ask him.”

The young officer looked up, with a flush upon his beardless face. He was a very young bird to endeavour to hold his own among these seasoned old vampires. It was evident from the way in which they glanced round at him when Grossière made the remark, that he had been elected as the butt of the company.

“What if I have bad luck?” he said. “It’s all fair play and the fortune of war. I’ll try again.”

And he drank down a tumbler of champagne to try and drown the vision of a little woman down at Montpellier, in the sunny south, who was scraping and saving in order to keep her handsome boy like a gentleman in Paris.

“That’s right! Pluckily said!” went up the chorus of voices from around the table.

“Don’t drink your wine like that, though,” said Cachet. “You’ll make yourself unsteady.”

“I’m afraid our military friend is unsteady already,” remarked Lablas.

“Not at all, monsieur,” said the young Lieutenant. “My hand is as steady as your own.”

“There is no hand in Paris as steady as my own, young man,” returned Lablas. “Lallacourt, of your own regiment, could tell you as much. You were with me, Cachet, when I shot away his trigger finger at Vincennes. I stopped his pistol shooting for ever and a day. Do you perceive a little dark spot which is fixed in the centre of the white sheet at the other side of the room? It is the head of a fusee, a mark which I generally use for the purpose of practice, as there can be no doubt as to whether you have struck it or not. You will excuse the smell of gunpowder, messieurs?” he continued, taking a small and highly-finished pistol from a rack upon the wall.

He seemed hardly to glance along the sights; but as he pulled the trigger, there was a crack and spurt of flame from the other side of the room, and the fusee, struck by the bullet, was scattered in burning splinters upon the floor.

“I hardly think you will venture to state that your hand is as steady as mine for the future,” he added, glancing towards the young officer, as he replaced the dainty weapon in its stand upon the wall.

“It was a good shot, sir,” returned the other.

“Hang the shooting!” said Grossière, rattling up the dice. “If you want your revenge, Lieutenant, now is your time!”

And once again money began to change hands, while a hush in the talk showed how all interest was concentrated upon the table. Lablas did not play, but he hovered round the green baize like some evil spirit, with his hard smile upon his lips, and his cold eye bent upon the man who was at once his guest and his dupe.

Poor lad! No wonder he lost when all were combining to play against him. He pushed his chair back at last in despair.

“It is useless!” he said. “The luck is against me! But, gentlemen,” he added, beseechingly, “if I can raise a little money tomorrow, even though it be only a little, you will not refuse to play the same stakes—you will give me a chance?”

“We will play just exactly as long as your little lasts!” said Turville, with a brutal laugh.

The young officer was flushed and excited. He sat apart from the others, and seemed to hear the talk which ensued as in a dream. He had an uneasy feeling that all had not been fair, and yet, do what he would, he could not give one proof to the contrary.

“Pass over the wine,” said Grossière. “Where were you till one o’clock, Lablas?”

Lablas showed his white teeth in a smile.

“The old story, I suppose?” said Turville.

“Bah! It is becoming too old a story,” resumed Grossière. “A story without change or variety is apt to become monotonous. One intrigue is as like another as a pair of small swords, and success is always the end of them.”

“They are too easily won,” assented Cachet.

“I promise you this will not be too easily won,” said Lablas. “Though she is a quarry worth flying for, as she is as beautiful as an angel, she is strictly preserved too; and there is a six-foot brother acting as gamekeeper, so there is a prospect of some little excitement.”

“Have you made any advance yet?” asked Cachet.

“No; I have taken a few preliminary observations, however,” returned the roué. “I fear it must be done by force, and it will need both courage and tact.”

“Who is the girl, Lablas?” said Turville.

“That I won’t answer.”

“Come, do tell us her name.”

“Curiosity sometimes verges on impertinence,” said Lablas, looking from under his eyebrows at his brother actor. “Take care that you do not cross the border, for I never tolerate a liberty.”

Turville was a brave man enough, but he sank his eyes before the fiery glance of the practised duellist.

There was a moment’s silence, and then Lablas stretched out his hand and said, “Come, Turville, forgive and forget. I didn’t mean to speak hastily, but you know my cursed temper. There, I can say no more. After all, there is no reason why I should not give you the name. I may need your assistance; and, in any case, you are men of honour, and would not thwart me in my plans. I don’t suppose any of you know her. Her name is Rose Latour, and she lives in the Rue Bertrand.

“What? The sister of Henry Latour?” cried Grossière. “Yes, the same. Do you know him?”

“Know him? Why he plays Laertes to your Hamlet on Monday night.'”

“The deuce he does!”

“Yes, old Lambertin closed with him last night. This will be a pretty complication! As good a fellow as ever breathed.”

“I don’t see that that affects the question of my carrying off his sister.”

“I know the girl, too—as chaste as she is beautiful. You’ll never succeed there, Lablas. She is an angel upon earth, and her brother is not the man to be trifled with.”

“My dear fellow,” said Lablas, “don’t you see that every word you say is strengthening my resolution? As you said just now, intrigues become monotonous. There is some variety about an abduction.”

“You will fail,” said Grossière.

“On the contrary, I shall succeed.”

“I would stake my head that you will fail.”

“If you are willing to stake ten thousand francs, it will be more to the purpose. Shall it be a bet, and I claim twenty-four hours only in which to carry the little Puritan off.”

“Done!” responded the comedian.

“You are my witnesses, messieurs,” said Lablas, turning to the company, and entering the figures in an ivory writing-tablet.

There was a hush as he wrote, and then a youthful voice broke the silence.

“I will be no partner to this!” it said.

It was the young officer.

He had risen from his chair, and was standing opposite Lablas.

There was a murmur of surprise among the actors as their butt and plaything rose up and dared the arch-spirit of them all. They would have saved him if they could. Cachet grasped him by the sleeve, and half pulled him down.

“Sit down!” he whispered,—”sit down! He is the deadliest shot in France!”

“I will not sit down!” said the soldier. “I protest against this! If the young lady’s helplessness and virtue are powerless to screen her, surely the fact that her brother is your fellow-actor should suffice to save her from your insulting wager.”

Lablas never raised his eyes from the book in which he was writing.

“How long,” he said, in the cold, measured voice which those who had heard it knew to be more dangerous than the bully’s shout,—”how long have you turned moralist, Monsieur Malpas?”

“I have not turned moralist. I simply remain a gentleman, a title which I regret to say that you have forfeited.”

“Indeed! You become personal.”

“I don’t pretend to be immaculate; far from it. But, so help me Heaven! nothing in the whole world would induce me to be an accomplice in such a cold-blooded, villainous seduction!”

There was a brave ring in the lad’s voice as he spoke, and all the fire of the chivalrous South sparkled in his eyes.

“I only regret,” he continued, “that your confiding your plans to our honour before revealing them will prevent my helping to frustrate them.”

“Dear, innocent youth!” sneered Lablas. “I think I see the cause of your conversion to morality. You have some intentions in that quarter yourself, mon cher. Is it not so?”

“You lie, and you know that you lie!” said the soldier. “Here, hold him—hold his arms, Cachet! Pull him back! Don’t let them brawl like roughs!”

“Let me go, I say!” yelled Lablas. “He called me a liar! I’ll have his life!”

“To-morrow, my dear fellow—to-morrow,” said Grossière. “We will see that you have every satisfaction.”

“There is my card,” said the Lieutenant, as he threw it down upon the table. “You shall find me ready whenever it is convenient to you. Capitaine Haut shares my rooms; he will act as my friend. Adieu, gentlemen!—au revoir, monsieur!”

And the young fellow turned on his heel, and swaggered gallantly out of the room, leaving his money behind him.

In spite of his faults, the old lady in Montpellier would not have been ashamed of her son if she could have seen him then.

“You will call upon his friend to-morrow, Cachet,” said Lablas, grimly. “In the meantime, to business. Can I rely upon your help in the matter of the girl—and yours, Turville?”

“We will do all we can.”

“Well, I had a good look at the house to-night. It is a simple two-storey one, and she sleeps alone in one of the upper rooms. So much I gathered, partly from observation, and partly from the servant. They go to bed early, and there is only the brother and the old lady in the house. They have no shutters to the bedrooms—only blinds.”

“What will be your mode of action?”

“It is easy enough. You know the street is a very quiet one. We’ll take my closed carriage; one of us can drive. Then, as you know, I have a ladder in three pieces for such little affairs. It can be brought with us. We leave the carriage; put up our ladder, open her window, gag her in her sleep, carry her down, and it is done. If she is awake and screams, surely the three of us can knock her brother on the head. They will have no clue as to who we are, or where we have gone. It will be a splendid triumph.”

“So it will;” and the three men laughed heartily.

“The little prude! She will be tractable enough soon, I warrant. Well, I must be steady to-morrow, so I had better turn in for a few hours. I shall want you in the Rue Bertrand about two o’clock on Monday morning. They go to bed at eleven. Good night.” And, throwing his half-finished cigar into the fire, the profligate actor sauntered out of the room, leaving his associates to discuss the diabolical deed in which they were called upon to assist.

The Tragedians III

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