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"I don't mean the novel."
"I can't think of anything more but those pieces of petrified wood, and those you gave me," she said demurely. "I am sure that whatever else I have of yours you have given me without even my asking, and if you want it back you've only got to say so."
"I suppose that would be my very best course," I groaned.
"I hate people who force a present on one," she continued, "and then, just as one begins to like it, want it back."
Before I could speak, she asked hurriedly, "How often do you come to Chicago?"
I took that to be a sort of command that I was to wait, and though longing to have it settled then and there, I braked myself up and answered her question. Now I see what a duffer I was--Madge told me afterward that she asked only because she was so frightened and confused that she felt she must stop my speaking for a moment.
I did my best till I heard the whistle the locomotive gives as it runs into yard limits, and then rose. "Good-by, Miss Cullen," I said, properly enough, though no death-bed farewell was ever more gloomily spoken; and she responded, "Good-by, Mr. Gordon," with equal propriety.
I held her hand, hating to let her go, and the first thing I knew, I blurted out, "I wish I had the bra.s.s of Lord Ralles!"
"I don't," she laughed, "because, if you had, I shouldn't be willing to let you--"
And what she was going to say, and why she didn't say it, is the concern of no one but Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gordon.
THE RISEN DEAD
BY MAX PEMBERTON
CHAPTER I
The sun was setting on the second day of June, in the year 1701, when Pietro Falier, the Captain of the Police of Venice, quitted his office in the Piazzetta of St. Mark and set out, alone, for the Palace of Fra Giovanni, the Capuchin friar, who lived over on the Island of the Guidecca.
"I shall return in an hour," he said to his subordinate as he stepped into the black gondola which every Venetian knew so well. "If any has need of me, I am at the house of Fra Giovanni."
The subordinate saluted, and returned slowly toward the ducal palace.
He was thinking that his Captain went over-much just then to the house of that strange friar who had come to Venice so mysteriously, and so mysteriously had won the favor of the republic.
"Saint John!" he muttered to himself, "that we should dance attendance on a shaven crown--we, who were the masters of the city a year ago!
What is the Captain thinking of? Are we all women, then, or have women plucked our brains that it should be Fra Giovanni this and Fra Giovanni that, and your tongue snapped off if you so much as put a question. To the devil with all friars, say I."
The good fellow stopped a moment in his walk to lay the flat of his sword across the shoulders of a mountebank, who had dared to remain seated at the door of his booth while so great a person pa.s.sed. Then he returned to his office, and whispered in the ear of his colleague the a.s.surance that the Captain was gone again to the island of the Jews, and that his business was with the friar.
"And look you, Michele," said he, "it is neither to you nor to me that he comes nowadays. Not a whisper of it, as I live, except to this friar, whom I could crush between my fingers as a gla.s.s ball out of Murano."
His colleague shook his head.
"There have been many," said he, "who have tried to crush Fra Giovanni. They grin between the bars of dungeons, my friend--at least, those who have heads left to grin with. Be warned of me, and make an ally of the man who has made an ally of Venice. The Captain knows well what he is doing. If he has gone to the priest's house now, it is that the priest may win rewards for us again, as he has won them already a hundred times.
He spoke earnestly, though, in truth, his guess was not a good one.
The Captain of the Police had not gone to the Island of the Guidecca to ask a service of the friar; he had gone, as he thought, to save the friar's life. At the moment when his subordinates were wagging their heads together, he himself stood in the priest's house, before the very table at which Fra Giovanni sat busy with his papers and his books.
"I implore you to listen to me, Prince!" he had just exclaimed very earnestly, as he repeated the news for the second time, and stood clamorous for the answer to his question.
The friar, who was dressed in the simple habit of the Capuchins, and who wore his cowl over his head so that only his s.h.i.+ning black eyes could be seen, put down his pen when he heard himself addressed as "Prince."
"Captain," he said sharply, "who is this person you come here to warn?
You speak of him as 'Prince.' It is some other, then, and not myself?"
The Captain bit his lip. He was one of the four in Venice who knew something of Fra Giovanni's past.
"Your Excellency's pardon," he exclaimed very humbly; "were we not alone, you would find me more discreet. I know well that the Prince of Iseo is dead--in Venice at least. But to Fra Giovanni, his near kinsman, I say beware, for there are those here who have sworn he shall not live to say Ma.s.s again."
For an instant a strange light came into the priest's eyes. But he gave no other sign either of surprise or of alarm.
"They have sworn it--you know their names, Captain?"
"The police do not concern themselves with names, Excellency."
"Which means that you do not know their names, Captain?"
Pietro Falier sighed. This friar never failed to humble him, he thought. If it were not for the honors which the monk had obtained for the police since he began his work in Venice, the Captain said that he would not lift a hand to save him from the meanest bravo in Italy.
"You do not know their names, Captain--confess, confess," continued the priest, raising his hand in a bantering gesture; "you come to me with some gossip of the bed-chamber, your ears have been open in the market-place, and this t.i.ttle-tattle is your purchase--confess, confess."
The Captain flushed as he would have done before no other in all Venice.
"I do not know their names, Excellency," he stammered; "it is gossip from the _bravo's_ kitchen. They say that you are to die before Ma.s.s to-morrow. I implore you not to leave this house to-night. We shall know how to do the rest if you will but remain indoors."
It was an earnest entreaty, but it fell upon deaf ears. The priest answered by taking a sheet of paper and beginning to write upon it.
"I am indebted to you, Signor Falier," said he, quietly, "and you know that I am not the man to forget my obligations. None the less, I fear that I must disregard your warning, for I have an appointment in the market to-night, and my word is not so easily broken. Let me rea.s.sure you a little. The news that you bring to me, and for which I am your debtor, was known to me three days ago. Here upon this paper I have written down the name of the woman and of her confederates who have hired the _bravo_ Rocca to kill me to-night in the shadow of the church of San Salvatore. You will read that paper and the woman's name--when you have my permission."
Falier stepped back dumb with amazement.
"The woman's name, Excellency," he repeated, so soon as his surprise permitted him to speak, "you know her, then?"
"Certainly, or how could I write it upon the paper?"
"But you will give that paper to me, here and now. Think, Excellency, if she is your enemy, she is the enemy also of Venice. What forbids that we arrest her at once? You may not be alive at dawn!"
"In which case," exclaimed the priest, satirically, "the Signori of the Night would be well able to answer for the safety of the city. Is it not so, Captain?"
Falier stammered an excuse.
"We have not your eyes, Excellency; we cannot work miracles--but at least we can try to protect you from the hand of the a.s.sa.s.sin. Name this woman to me, and she shall not live when midnight strikes."