The Tragedians by Arthur Conan Doyle
The Tragedians I
The Tragedians II
The Tragedians III
The Tragedians IV
The Tragedians III
It is strange how naturally Englishmen adapt themselves to the customs of the country in which they happen to be placed—more especially when those customs happen to accord with their own inclinations.
At home I am a rigid Churchman enough; but on that Parisian Sunday, the still small voice of conscience was even stiller and smaller than usual, as I sauntered round to the Rue Bertrand to see if my new friend, Henry Latour, would have pity on my loneliness, and venture out for a stroll.
Possibly the fair Rose had more to do with my visit than her brother; but, if so, I was disappointed, as that young lady had just tripped off to church, and I was compelled to put up with the male element of the household.
“You couldn’t possibly have done better than come,” said Henry, as he stretched his tall frame in a stupendous yawn. “I have been sitting in this confounded chair, making sure of my part, ever since breakfast, and I think I am right at last. I have been doing the quarte tierce business too with the poker, in preparation for the last scene. You know I used to be an excellent fencer, and it always brings down the house.”
“I suppose your Hamlet can fence?” I remarked.
“He is notorious for it,” Henry answered, as a dark shade passed over his handsome face. “But come, Barker; it’s my last free day for some time to come, so we must make the most of it.”
We certainly did make the most of it, and the young actor proved himself to be an admirable cicerone, doing the honours of picture galleries and museums with an amusing air of proprietorship. He was in excellent spirits about his engagement at the National, to which he often referred as being a splendid opening.
“There’s only one drawback,” he remarked, “and that is having to play second fiddle to that unmitigated scoundrel, Lablas. He is a profligate fellow, Barker. This very morning they say that he fought a duel in the Bois de Boulogne; shot a young officer of cavalry through the lungs. I shall have a quarrel with him, I fear; for, as Hamlet says, ‘There is something sensitive in me,’ and the man’s manner jars upon me more than I can tell.”
It was dark by this time, and we were both somewhat fatigued and hungry after our long peregrination.
“There’s a café here,” said Henry, “on the right-hand side, close to the railway station, where we can have a quiet little meal. That’s it where the lights are. Shall we try it?”
“All right,” I said. And we turned to enter.
Just at this moment, a tall young fellow, with a carpet-bag in his hand, who was coming out, ran against us.
“Pardon, messieurs,” he said, turning half round and bowing, and was about to pass on, when Henry sprang forward, and caught him by the arm.
“Jack, my boy, where in the world did you come from?”
“Henry, and Barker, by all that is astonishing!” said the voice of my old college friend, Jack Latour, as he seized us alternately by the hand. “Why, what an extraordinary thing!”
“Extraordinary, indeed,” cried his brother. “Why, we thought you were in Edinburgh, hundreds of miles away!”
“So I ought to be; but it struck me yesterday that a change of air would do me good. The insolent familiarity of the British tradesman was beginning to prey upon my mind. My tailor was exhibiting an increased hankering after his filthy lucre, so I thought I would deprive him for a few weeks of the refining influence of my society.”
“The old game, Jack,” said I.
“Yes, the old game; and I conclude you fellows are up to the old game, since I find you mooning about the first ‘pub’ I pass—I beg pardon, café. Café sounds better than ‘pub’.”
“How do you account for your own presence here?” laughed Henry.
“My dear fellow, you don’t seriously suppose that I came in search of bibulous refreshment? No; it was a harmless eccentricity which led me within these walls. What do you fellows intend to do with yourselves? There is no use my knocking up Rose and the mother to-night, so I shall stay with you.”
“We have nothing particular to do,” I said.
“Then come up to the ‘Anglais’ with me. Two Edinburgh men are up there—Grant and Buckley. Will you come?”
“I am willing,” said I.
“And I,” said Henry.
So the bargain was concluded, and we all three repaired to the hotel, where we were introduced to Jack’s friends, a couple of reckless, light-hearted medical students of his own kidney.
There is no reason why I should dwell upon the convivial evening which ensued. I have only alluded to these things as influencing the dark events which were impending.
It was close upon one o’clock before Henry Latour glanced at his watch, and announced that it was high time to break up.
“I must run over my part again to-morrow,” he said. “You come along with me, Jack, and we can sleep together without disturbing anyone. I have a key.”
“I’ll walk round with you,” said I; “I want to finish my pipe.”
I am afraid that the sight of a certain window was becoming dearer to me than all the tobacco Virginia ever grew.
The brothers were delighted that I should come, so we bade our fellow countrymen adieu, and set off together.
We were a hilarious party as long as we kept to the well-lit Boulevards, but when we got into the quiet streets which branch off from them, a curious feeling of depression stole over us, which affected even the irrepressible Jack.
We strode on together, each buried in his own thoughts.
Everything was very still—so still that we all looked up in surprise when a closed carriage rattled past us, going in our own direction.
“That fellow is driving at a deuce of a rate,” remarked Jack. “Without lights either,” I said.
“I wonder where he can be bound for? This is not much of a carriage neighbourhood, especially at such an hour.”
“Well, anyway, he isn’t going to visit us,” laughed Henry; “so it’s no business of ours.”
And so saying, he quickened his pace, and we all three rounded the corner, and passed into the Rue Bertrand.
We were hardly round, before Jack stopped in amazement. “Why, Harry!” he said; “what on earth is this? They just exactly are visiting us!”
There was no doubt about it. The moon had just come from behind a cloud, and was pouring a flood of cold light upon the dingy little street. And there, away down opposite number twenty-two, was a dark blur, which could be nothing but the carriage. It had pulled up.
“What is it?” said Henry.
“There are a couple of men on the pavement!”
“One of them has a lantern!”
“What a lark!” cried Jack. “It’s my Edinburgh tailor, for a dollar!”
“They can’t be burglars!” I whispered. “Let us watch them for a bit.”
“By Heaven, there’s ladder against a window—against Rose’s window!” hissed a voice which we could hardly recognise as Henry’s it was so altered.
The light fell upon his face, and I could see that it was dark with wrath, and that his jaw was fixed and hard, while his features worked spasmodically.
“The villains!” he said. “Come after me, but quietly!” Swiftly and silently he started down the street.
Jack’s rage was as great as his brother’s, but he was of a less fiery disposition. He ground his teeth, and followed Henry with giant strides.
Had I been alone, I should have shouted my indignation, and hurried forward to the rescue. Henry Latour’s was the leading mind among us, however, and it is on such occasions that mind asserts itself. There was something terrible in his very stillness.
We followed him implicitly down the road.
Rain had fallen during the evening, and the ground was very soft.
We made little noise as we approached the carriage. We might have made more without fear of detection, for the horses had been left to themselves, and the men we had seen were in the front garden, too much occupied with their own movements and those of their leader to be easily disturbed. The Rue de Bertrand was a cul de sac, and the possibility of being disturbed at their work was so slight as to be disregarded.
Henry slipped behind the carriage, and we followed him. We were effectually concealed, and commanded a view of all that was going on in front of us.
Two of the men were standing at the foot of a ladder which was reared against one of the upper windows.
They were watching the movements of a third who appeared at that moment at the open casement bearing something on his arms.
My blood seemed to run in a fiery torrent through my veins as I saw the man place his foot upon the upper step and begin to descend. I glanced at Henry, but he held up his hand as if to ask for one more moment’s forbearance. I could see that he knew as well as I did what the poor little white burden was which the man was clasping to his breast. I had lost sight of Jack, but a smothered curse from between the wheels showed me where he was crouching.
The leader came slowly and gingerly down the ladder. He must have been a powerful fellow, for the additional weight did not seem to inconvenience him. We could see that his face was covered with a mask. His friends below kept encouraging him in whispers.
He reached the bottom without an accident.
“Hurry her into the carriage!” he said.
Henry rose silently to his feet, with every muscle braced. The time for action had arrived.
And at this very moment the prisoner’s gag must have slipped, for a sweet, piteous voice rang out on the still night,—”Harry! Brother! Help!”
Never, surely, was an appeal so promptly answered. The spring was so swift, so sudden, that I never saw him leave my side. I heard a snarl like a wild beast’s and a dull thud, and my friend with the man in the mask were rolling on the ground together.
It all happened in less time than I take to tell it. Jack and I ran forward to assist Rose into the house; but we were confronted by the two confederates.
I would have passed my antagonist in order to help the lady, but he flew at me with a savage oath, hitting wildly with both hands.
A Frenchman can never realise the fact that a segment is shorter than an arc; but I gave my opponent a practical illustration of the fact by stopping him with a facer before he could bring his hands round, and then toppling him over with what is known to the initiated as a Cribb’s hit behind the ear.
He sat down upon a rose-bush with a very sickly smile, and manifested a strong disinclination to rise up; so I turned my attention to Jack.
I was just in time to see his adversary make a desperate attempt to practice the barbarous French savate upon him; but the student was a man of expedients, and springing aside, he seized the uplifted foot, and gave it a wrench, which brought the discomfited owner howling to the ground with a dislocated leg.
We led poor trembling Rose into the house, and after handing her over to her frightened mother, hurried back into the garden.
Neither of our acquaintances were in a condition to come up to time; but the struggle between their leader and Henry Latour was going on with unabated vigour.
It was useless to attempt to help our friend. They were so entwined, and revolving so rapidly upon the gravel walk, that it was impossible to distinguish the one from the other.
They were fighting in silence, and each was breathing hard.
But the clean living of the younger man began to tell. He had the better stamina of the two.
I saw the glint of the moonlight upon his sleeve-links as he freed his arm, and then I heard the sound of a heavy blow. It seemed to stun his antagonist for a moment; but before it could be repeated he had shaken himself free, and both men staggered to their feet.
The mask had been torn off, and exposed the pale face of the Frenchman, with a thin stream of blood coursing down it from a wound on the forehead.
“You infernal scoundrel! I know you now!” yelled Henry, and would have sprung at him again had we not restrained him.
“Ma foi! you’ll know me better before you die!” hissed the man, with a sinister smile.
“You accursed villain! do you think I fear your threats? I’ll fight you now if you wish; I have weapons! Run in for the pistols, Jack!”
“Quietly, old man—quietly,” said I; “don’t do anything rash.”
“Rash!” raved Henry. “Why, man, it was my sister! Give me a pistol!”
“It is for me to name the time and place,” said Lablas; for he it was. “It is I who have been struck.”
“When, then?”
“You shall hear from me in the morning. Suffice it that you shall be chastised before all Paris. I shall make a public warning of you, my young friend.”
And with the same hard smile upon his face, he mounted upon the box, and seized the reins.
“If this gentleman whose joint I have had the pleasure of damaging considers himself aggrieved,” said Jack, “he shall always find me ready to make any amends in my power.”
“The same applies to my friend on the right,” said I. “I refer to the gentleman with the curious swelling under his ear.”
Our friends only answered our kind attentions by a volley of curses.
The patron of the savate was hoisted into the carriage, and the other followed him; while Lablas, still white with passion, drove furiously off, amid laughter from Jack and myself and curses from Henry, whose fiery blood was too thoroughly roused to allow him to view the matter in its ridiculous aspect.
“Nothing like evaporating lotions for bruises,” was the practical piece of advice which our medical student shouted after them as the carriage rumbled away like a dark nightmare, and the sound of its wheels died gradually in the distance.
At this moment a gendarme, true to the traditions of his order, hurried on to the scene of action; but after jotting down the number of the house in a portentous note-book, he gave up the attempt of extracting any information from us, and departed with many shrugs.
My heart was heavy as I trudged back to my hotel that night. There is always a reaction after such excitement, and I wasuneasy at the thought of what the morrow might bring forth.
The allusion which Henry had made in the early part of the evening to the duelling proclivities of Lablas, and in particular to the sinister result of his encounter with the young French officer, had not been forgotten by me.
I knew the wild blood which ran in my friend’s veins, and that it would be hopeless to attempt to dissuade him from a meeting. I was powerless, and must let events take their own course.