c.1905 –
Copyright 1905, by Harper & Brothers
There
is little need for me to describe in detail the story of my railway journey
from
“We shall be almost as great a combination as the original Bunny,” she cried,
enthusiastically, when I told her of this coup. “With my brain and your
blind luck nothing can stop us.”
My own feelings as I drove up to Bolivar Lodge were mixed. I still loved
Henriette madly, but the contrast between her present luxury and my recent
misery grated harshly upon me. I could not rid myself of the notion that
Raffles had told her of the secret hiding-place of the diamond stomacher of the
duchesss of Herringdale, and that she had
appropriated to her own use all the proceeds of its sale, leaving me, who had
risked my liberty to obtain it, without a penny’s worth of dividend for my
pains. It did not seem quit a level thing to do, and I must confess that
I greeted the lady in a reproachful spirit. It was, indeed, she, and more
radiantly beautiful than ever---a trifle thinner perhaps, and her eyes more
coldly piercing than seductively winning as of yore, but still Henriette whom I
had once so madly loved and who had jilted me for a
better man.
“Dear old Bunny!” she murmured, holding out both hands in welcome. “Just
to think that after all these years and in a strange land and under such
circumstances we should meet again!”
“It is strange,” said I, my eye roving about the drawing-room, which from the
point of view of its appointments was about the richest thing I had ever seen
either by light of day or in the mysterious glimpses one gets with a dark lantern
of the houses of the moneyed classes. “It seems more than strange,” I
added, significantly,” to see you surrounded by such luxury. A so-called
lodge built of the finest grade of Italian marble; gardens fit for the palace
of a king; a retinue of servants such as one scarcely finds on the ducal
estates of the proudest families of England and a mansion that is furnished
with treasures of art, any one of which is worth a queen’s ransom.”
“I
do not wonder you are surprised,” she replied, looking about the room with a
smile of satisfaction that did little to soothe my growing wrath.
“It certainly leaves room for explanation,” I retorted, coldly. “Of
course, if Raffles told you where the Herringdale jewels were hid and you have
disposed of them, some of all this could be accounted for; but what of
me? Did it ever occur to you that I was entitled to some part of the
swag?”
‘Oh, you poor, suspicious old Bunny,” she rippled. “Haven’t I sent for
you to give you some share of this---although truly you don’t deserve it, for this
is all mine. I haven’t any more notion what become of the Herringdale jewels than the
duchess of Herringdale herself.”
“What?” I cried. “Then these surroundings---“
“Are self-furnishing,” she said, with a merry little laugh, “and all though a
plan of my own, Bunny. This house, as you may not be aware, is the late
residence of Mr. and Mrs. Constant Scrappe---”
“Who are suing each other for divorce,” I put in, for I knew of the Constant Scrappes in social life, as who did not, since a good third
of the society items of the day concerned themselves with the matrimonial
difficulties of this notable couple.
“Precisely,” said Henriette. “Now Mrs. Scrappe is in South Dakota
establishing a residence, and Colonel Scrappe is at Monte Carlo circulating his
money with the aid of a wheel and a small ball. Bolivar Lodge, with its
fine collection of old furniture, its splendid jades, its marvelous Oriental
potteries, and innumerable small silver articles, is left here at Newport and
for rent. What more natural, dear, than that I, needing a residence whose
occupancy would in itself be an assurance of my social position, should snap it
up with an eagerness which in this Newport atmosphere accounted nearly to a betrayal
of plebian origin?”
“But it must cost a fortune!” I cried, gazing about me at the splendors of the
room, which even to a cursory inspection revealed themselves as of priceless
value. “That cloisonné jar over by the fireplace is worth two hundred
pounds alone.”
“That is just the reason I wanted this particular house, Bunny. It is
also why I need your assistance in maintaining it,” Mrs. Raffles returned.
“Woman is ever a mystery,” I responded, with a harsh laugh. “Why in
Heaven’s name you think I can help you to pay your rent---”
“It is only twenty-five hundred dollars a month, Bunny,” she said.
My
answer was a roar of derisive laughter.
“Hear her!” I cried, addressing the empty chair. “Only twenty-five
hundred dollars a month! Why, my dear Henriette, if it were twenty-five
hundred clam-shells a century I couldn’t help you pay a day’s rental, I am that
strapped. Until this afternoon I hadn’t seen thirty cents all at once for
nigh on to six months. I have been so poor that I’ve had to take my
morning coffee at midnight from the coffee-wagons of the New York, Boston, and
Chicago sporting papers. In eight months I have not tasted a table-d’hote dinner that an expert would value at fifteen cents
net, and yet you ask me to help you pay twenty-five hundred dollars a month
rent for a Newport palace! You must be mad.”
“You are the same loquacious old Bunny that you used to be,” said Mrs. Raffles,
sharply, yet with a touch of affection in her voice. “You can’t keep your
trap shut for a second, can you? Do you know, Bunny, what dear old A. J.
said to me just before he went to South Africa? It was that if you were
as devoted to business as you were to words you’d be a wonder. His exact
remark was that we would both have to look out for you for fear you would queer
the whole business. Raffles estimated that your habit of writing-up full
accounts of his various burglaries for the London magazines had made the risks
one hundred per cent, bigger and the available swag a thousand per cent harder
to get hold of. ‘Harry,’ said he the night before he sailed, “if I die
over in the Transvaal and you decide to continue the business, get along as
long as you can without a press-agent. If you go on the stage, surround yourself
with ‘em, but in the burglary trade they are a
nuisance.”
My
answer was a sulky shrug of the shoulders.
“You haven’t given me a chance to explain how you are to help me. I don’t
ask you for money, Bunny. Four dollars worth of obedience is all I want,”
she continued. “The portable property in this mansion is worth about half
a million dollars, my lad, and I want you to be---well, my official
porter. I took immediate possession of this house, and my first month’s
rent was paid with the proceeds of a sale of three old bedsteads I found on the
top floor, six pieces of Sevres china from the southeast bedroom on the floor
above this, and a Satsuma vase which I discovered in a hall-closet on the third
floor.”
A
light began to dawn on me.
“Before coming here I eked out a miserable existence in New York as a buyer for
an antique dealer on Fourth Avenue,” she explained. “He thinks I am still
working for him, traveling about the country in search of bargains in
high-boys, mahogany desks, antique tables, wardrobes, bedsteads---in short,
valuable junk generally. Now do you see?”
“As Mrs. Raffles---or Van Raffles, as you have it now?” I demanded.
“Oh, Bunny, Bunny, Bunny! What a stupid you are! Never! As
Miss Pratt-Robinson,” she replied. “From this I earn fifteen dollars a
week. The sources of the material I send him---well---do you see now,
Bunny?”
“It is growing clearer,” said I. “You contemplate paying the rent of this
house with its contents, is that it?”
“What beautiful intelligence you have, Bunny!” she laughed, airily. “You
know a hawk from a hand-saw. Nobody can pass a motor-car off on you for a
horse, can they, Bunny dear? Not while you have that eagle eye of yours
wide open. Yes, sir. That is the scheme. I am going to pay
the rental of this mansion with its contents. Half a million
dollars’ worth of contents means how long at twenty-five hundred dollars a
month? Eh?”
“Gad! Henriette,” I cried. “You are worthy of Raffles, I swear
it. You can be easy about your rent for sixteen years.”
“That is about the size of it, as these Newport people have it,” said Mrs.
Raffles, beaming upon me.
“I’m still in the dark as to where I come in,” said I.
“Promise to obey my directions implicitly,” said Henriette “and you will
receive your share of the booty.”
“Henriette---“ I cried, passionately, seizing her hand.
“No---Bunny---not now,” she remonstrated, gently. “This is no time for
sentiment. Just promise to obey, the love and honor business may come
later.”
“I
will,” said I.
“Well, then” she resumed, her color mounting high, and speaking rapidly,” you
are to return at once to New York, taking with you three trunks which I have
already packed containing one of the most beautiful collections of jade
ornaments that has ever been gathered together. You will rent a furnished
apartment in some aristocratic quarter. Spread these articles throughout
your rooms as though you were a connoisseur, and on Thursday next when Mr. Harold
Van Gilt calls upon you to see your collection you will sell it to him for not
less than eight thousand dollars.”
“Aha!” said I. “I see the scheme.”
“This you will immediately remit to me here,” she continued, excitedly.
“Mr. Van Gilt will pay cash.”
I
laughed. “Why eight thousand?” I demanded. “Are you living beyond
your---ah---income?”
“No,”
she answered, “but next month’s rent is due Tuesday, and I owe my servants and
tradesmen twenty-five hundred dollars more.”
“Even then there will be three thousand dollars over,” I put in.
“True, Bunny, true. But I shall need it all, dear. I am invited to
the P. J. D. Gasters on Sunday afternoon to play
bridge,” Henriette explained. “We must prepare for emergencies.”
I
returned to New York on the boat that night, and by Wednesday was safely
ensconced in very beautifully furnished bachelor quarters near Gramercy Square,
where on Thursday Mr. Harold Van Gilt called to see my collection of jades
which I was selling because of a contemplated five-year journey into the
East. On Friday Mr. Van Gilt took possession of the collection, and that
night a check for eight thousand dollars went to Mrs. Van Raffles at
Newport. Incidentally, I passed two thousand dollars to my own credit.
As I figured it out, if Van Gilt was willing to pay ten thousand dollars for
the stuff, and Henriette was willing to take eight thousand dollars for it,
nobody was the loser by me pocketing two thousand dollars---unless, perhaps, it
was Mr. and Mrs. Constant Scrappe who owned the goods. But that was none
of my affair. I played straight with the others, and that was all there
was to it as far as I was concerned.