THE DUEL
Syme sat down at a cafe table
with his companions, his blue eyes sparkling like
the bright sea below, and ordered a bottle of Saumur
with a pleased impatience. He was for some reason
in a condition of curious hilarity. His spirits
were already unnaturally high; they rose as the Saumur
sank, and in half an hour his talk was a torrent of
nonsense. He professed to be making out a plan
of the conversation which was going to ensue between
himself and the deadly Marquis. He jotted it down
wildly with a pencil. It was arranged like a
printed catechism, with questions and answers, and
was delivered with an extraordinary rapidity of utterance.
“I shall approach. Before
taking off his hat, I shall take off my own.
I shall say, ‘The Marquis de Saint Eustache,
I believe.’ He will say, ‘The celebrated
Mr. Syme, I presume.’ He will say in the
most exquisite French, ‘How are you?’ I
shall reply in the most exquisite Cockney, ‘Oh,
just the Syme—’ “
“Oh, shut it,” said the
man in spectacles. “Pull yourself together,
and chuck away that bit of paper. What are you
really going to do?”
“But it was a lovely catechism,”
said Syme pathetically. “Do let me read
it you. It has only forty-three questions and
answers, and some of the Marquis’s answers are
wonderfully witty. I like to be just to my enemy.”
“But what’s the good of
it all?” asked Dr. Bull in exasperation.
“It leads up to my challenge,
don’t you see,” said Syme, beaming.
“When the Marquis has given the thirty-ninth
reply, which runs—”
“Has it by any chance occurred
to you,” asked the Professor, with a ponderous
simplicity, “that the Marquis may not say all
the forty-three things you have put down for him?
In that case, I understand, your own epigrams may
appear somewhat more forced.”
Syme struck the table with a radiant face.
“Why, how true that is,”
he said, “and I never thought of it. Sir,
you have an intellect beyond the common. You will
make a name.”
“Oh, you’re as drunk as an owl!”
said the Doctor.
“It only remains,” continued
Syme quite unperturbed, “to adopt some other
method of breaking the ice (if I may so express it)
between myself and the man I wish to kill. And
since the course of a dialogue cannot be predicted
by one of its parties alone (as you have pointed out
with such recondite acumen), the only thing to be
done, I suppose, is for the one party, as far as possible,
to do all the dialogue by himself. And so I will,
by George!” And he stood up suddenly, his yellow
hair blowing in the slight sea breeze.
A band was playing in a cafe chantant
hidden somewhere among the trees, and a woman had
just stopped singing. On Syme’s heated head
the bray of the brass band seemed like the jar and
jingle of that barrel-organ in Leicester Square, to
the tune of which he had once stood up to die.
He looked across to the little table where the Marquis
sat. The man had two companions now, solemn Frenchmen
in frock-coats and silk hats, one of them with the
red rosette of the Legion of Honour, evidently people
of a solid social position. Besides these black,
cylindrical costumes, the Marquis, in his loose straw
hat and light spring clothes, looked Bohemian and even
barbaric; but he looked the Marquis. Indeed, one
might say that he looked the king, with his animal
elegance, his scornful eyes, and his proud head lifted
against the purple sea. But he was no Christian
king, at any rate; he was, rather, some swarthy despot,
half Greek, half Asiatic, who in the days when slavery
seemed natural looked down on the Mediterranean, on
his galley and his groaning slaves. Just so,
Syme thought, would the brown-gold face of such a
tyrant have shown against the dark green olives and
the burning blue.
“Are you going to address the
meeting?” asked the Professor peevishly, seeing
that Syme still stood up without moving.
Syme drained his last glass of sparkling wine.
“I am,” he said, pointing
across to the Marquis and his companions, “that
meeting. That meeting displeases me. I am
going to pull that meeting’s great ugly, mahogany-coloured
nose.”
He stepped across swiftly, if not
quite steadily. The Marquis, seeing him, arched
his black Assyrian eyebrows in surprise, but smiled
politely.
“You are Mr. Syme, I think,” he said.
Syme bowed.
“And you are the Marquis de
Saint Eustache,” he said gracefully. “Permit
me to pull your nose.”
He leant over to do so, but the Marquis
started backwards, upsetting his chair, and the two
men in top hats held Syme back by the shoulders.
“This man has insulted me!”
said Syme, with gestures of explanation.
“Insulted you?” cried
the gentleman with the red rosette, “when?”
“Oh, just now,” said Syme
recklessly. “He insulted my mother.”
“Insulted your mother!”
exclaimed the gentleman incredulously.
“Well, anyhow,” said Syme,
conceding a point, “my aunt.”
“But how can the Marquis have
insulted your aunt just now?” said the second
gentleman with some legitimate wonder. “He
has been sitting here all the time.”
“Ah, it was what he said!” said Syme darkly.
“I said nothing at all,”
said the Marquis, “except something about the
band. I only said that I liked Wagner played well.”
“It was an allusion to my family,”
said Syme firmly. “My aunt played Wagner
badly. It was a painful subject. We are always
being insulted about it.”
“This seems most extraordinary,”
said the gentleman who was decore, looking doubtfully
at the Marquis.
“Oh, I assure you,” said
Syme earnestly, “the whole of your conversation
was simply packed with sinister allusions to my aunt’s
weaknesses.”
“This is nonsense!” said
the second gentleman. “I for one have said
nothing for half an hour except that I liked the singing
of that girl with black hair.”
“Well, there you are again!”
said Syme indignantly. “My aunt’s
was red.”
“It seems to me,” said
the other, “that you are simply seeking a pretext
to insult the Marquis.”
“By George!” said Syme,
facing round and looking at him, “what a clever
chap you are!”
The Marquis started up with eyes flaming
like a tiger’s.
“Seeking a quarrel with me!”
he cried. “Seeking a fight with me!
By God! there was never a man who had to seek long.
These gentlemen will perhaps act for me. There
are still four hours of daylight. Let us fight
this evening.”
Syme bowed with a quite beautiful graciousness.
“Marquis,” he said, “your
action is worthy of your fame and blood. Permit
me to consult for a moment with the gentlemen in whose
hands I shall place myself.”
In three long strides he rejoined
his companions, and they, who had seen his champagne-inspired
attack and listened to his idiotic explanations, were
quite startled at the look of him. For now that
he came back to them he was quite sober, a little pale,
and he spoke in a low voice of passionate practicality.
“I have done it,” he said
hoarsely. “I have fixed a fight on the
beast. But look here, and listen carefully.
There is no time for talk. You are my seconds,
and everything must come from you. Now you must
insist, and insist absolutely, on the duel coming off
after seven tomorrow, so as to give me the chance of
preventing him from catching the 7.45 for Paris.
If he misses that he misses his crime. He can’t
refuse to meet you on such a small point of time and
place. But this is what he will do. He will
choose a field somewhere near a wayside station, where
he can pick up the train. He is a very good swordsman,
and he will trust to killing me in time to catch it.
But I can fence well too, and I think I can keep him
in play, at any rate, until the train is lost.
Then perhaps he may kill me to console his feelings.
You understand? Very well then, let me introduce
you to some charming friends of mine,” and leading
them quickly across the parade, he presented them to
the Marquis’s seconds by two very aristocratic
names of which they had not previously heard.
Syme was subject to spasms of singular
common sense, not otherwise a part of his character.
They were (as he said of his impulse about the spectacles)
poetic intuitions, and they sometimes rose to the
exaltation of prophecy.
He had correctly calculated in this
case the policy of his opponent. When the Marquis
was informed by his seconds that Syme could only fight
in the morning, he must fully have realised that an
obstacle had suddenly arisen between him and his bomb-throwing
business in the capital. Naturally he could not
explain this objection to his friends, so he chose
the course which Syme had predicted. He induced
his seconds to settle on a small meadow not far from
the railway, and he trusted to the fatality of the
first engagement.
When he came down very coolly to the
field of honour, no one could have guessed that he
had any anxiety about a journey; his hands were in
his pockets, his straw hat on the back of his head,
his handsome face brazen in the sun. But it might
have struck a stranger as odd that there appeared
in his train, not only his seconds carrying the sword-case,
but two of his servants carrying a portmanteau and
a luncheon basket.
Early as was the hour, the sun soaked
everything in warmth, and Syme was vaguely surprised
to see so many spring flowers burning gold and silver
in the tall grass in which the whole company stood
almost knee-deep.
With the exception of the Marquis,
all the men were in sombre and solemn morning-dress,
with hats like black chimney-pots; the little Doctor
especially, with the addition of his black spectacles,
looked like an undertaker in a farce. Syme could
not help feeling a comic contrast between this funereal
church parade of apparel and the rich and glistening
meadow, growing wild flowers everywhere. But,
indeed, this comic contrast between the yellow blossoms
and the black hats was but a symbol of the tragic
contrast between the yellow blossoms and the black
business. On his right was a little wood; far
away to his left lay the long curve of the railway
line, which he was, so to speak, guarding from the
Marquis, whose goal and escape it was. In front
of him, behind the black group of his opponents, he
could see, like a tinted cloud, a small almond bush
in flower against the faint line of the sea.
The member of the Legion of Honour,
whose name it seemed was Colonel Ducroix, approached
the Professor and Dr. Bull with great politeness,
and suggested that the play should terminate with the
first considerable hurt.
Dr. Bull, however, having been carefully
coached by Syme upon this point of policy, insisted,
with great dignity and in very bad French, that it
should continue until one of the combatants was disabled.
Syme had made up his mind that he could avoid disabling
the Marquis and prevent the Marquis from disabling
him for at least twenty minutes. In twenty minutes
the Paris train would have gone by.
“To a man of the well-known
skill and valour of Monsieur de St. Eustache,”
said the Professor solemnly, “it must be a matter
of indifference which method is adopted, and our principal
has strong reasons for demanding the longer encounter,
reasons the delicacy of which prevent me from being
explicit, but for the just and honourable nature of
which I can—”
“Peste!” broke from the
Marquis behind, whose face had suddenly darkened,
“let us stop talking and begin,” and he
slashed off the head of a tall flower with his stick.
Syme understood his rude impatience
and instinctively looked over his shoulder to see
whether the train was coming in sight. But there
was no smoke on the horizon.
Colonel Ducroix knelt down and unlocked
the case, taking out a pair of twin swords, which
took the sunlight and turned to two streaks of white
fire. He offered one to the Marquis, who snatched
it without ceremony, and another to Syme, who took
it, bent it, and poised it with as much delay as was
consistent with dignity.
Then the Colonel took out another
pair of blades, and taking one himself and giving
another to Dr. Bull, proceeded to place the men.
Both combatants had thrown off their
coats and waistcoats, and stood sword in hand.
The seconds stood on each side of the line of fight
with drawn swords also, but still sombre in their dark
frock-coats and hats. The principals saluted.
The Colonel said quietly, “Engage!” and
the two blades touched and tingled.
When the jar of the joined iron ran
up Syme’s arm, all the fantastic fears that
have been the subject of this story fell from him
like dreams from a man waking up in bed. He remembered
them clearly and in order as mere delusions of the
nerves—how the fear of the Professor had
been the fear of the tyrannic accidents of nightmare,
and how the fear of the Doctor had been the fear of
the airless vacuum of science. The first was the
old fear that any miracle might happen, the second
the more hopeless modern fear that no miracle can
ever happen. But he saw that these fears were
fancies, for he found himself in the presence of the
great fact of the fear of death, with its coarse and
pitiless common sense. He felt like a man who
had dreamed all night of falling over precipices,
and had woke up on the morning when he was to be hanged.
For as soon as he had seen the sunlight run down the
channel of his foe’s foreshortened blade, and
as soon as he had felt the two tongues of steel touch,
vibrating like two living things, he knew that his
enemy was a terrible fighter, and that probably his
last hour had come.
He felt a strange and vivid value
in all the earth around him, in the grass under his
feet; he felt the love of life in all living things.
He could almost fancy that he heard the grass growing;
he could almost fancy that even as he stood fresh
flowers were springing up and breaking into blossom
in the meadow—flowers blood red and burning
gold and blue, fulfilling the whole pageant of the
spring. And whenever his eyes strayed for a flash
from the calm, staring, hypnotic eyes of the Marquis,
they saw the little tuft of almond tree against the
sky-line. He had the feeling that if by some
miracle he escaped he would be ready to sit for ever
before that almond tree, desiring nothing else in
the world.
But while earth and sky and everything
had the living beauty of a thing lost, the other half
of his head was as clear as glass, and he was parrying
his enemy’s point with a kind of clockwork skill
of which he had hardly supposed himself capable.
Once his enemy’s point ran along his wrist,
leaving a slight streak of blood, but it either was
not noticed or was tacitly ignored. Every now
and then he riposted, and once or twice he could almost
fancy that he felt his point go home, but as there
was no blood on blade or shirt he supposed he was
mistaken. Then came an interruption and a change.
At the risk of losing all, the Marquis,
interrupting his quiet stare, flashed one glance over
his shoulder at the line of railway on his right.
Then he turned on Syme a face transfigured to that
of a fiend, and began to fight as if with twenty weapons.
The attack came so fast and furious, that the one
shining sword seemed a shower of shining arrows.
Syme had no chance to look at the railway; but also
he had no need. He could guess the reason of the
Marquis’s sudden madness of battle—the
Paris train was in sight.
But the Marquis’s morbid energy
over-reached itself. Twice Syme, parrying, knocked
his opponent’s point far out of the fighting
circle; and the third time his riposte was so rapid,
that there was no doubt about the hit this time.
Syme’s sword actually bent under the weight
of the Marquis’s body, which it had pierced.
Syme was as certain that he had stuck
his blade into his enemy as a gardener that he has
stuck his spade into the ground. Yet the Marquis
sprang back from the stroke without a stagger, and
Syme stood staring at his own sword-point like an
idiot. There was no blood on it at all.
There was an instant of rigid silence,
and then Syme in his turn fell furiously on the other,
filled with a flaming curiosity. The Marquis
was probably, in a general sense, a better fencer than
he, as he had surmised at the beginning, but at the
moment the Marquis seemed distraught and at a disadvantage.
He fought wildly and even weakly, and he constantly
looked away at the railway line, almost as if he feared
the train more than the pointed steel. Syme, on
the other hand, fought fiercely but still carefully,
in an intellectual fury, eager to solve the riddle
of his own bloodless sword. For this purpose,
he aimed less at the Marquis’s body, and more
at his throat and head. A minute and a half afterwards
he felt his point enter the man’s neck below
the jaw. It came out clean. Half mad, he
thrust again, and made what should have been a bloody
scar on the Marquis’s cheek. But there
was no scar.
For one moment the heaven of Syme
again grew black with supernatural terrors. Surely
the man had a charmed life. But this new spiritual
dread was a more awful thing than had been the mere
spiritual topsy-turvydom symbolised by the paralytic
who pursued him. The Professor was only a goblin;
this man was a devil—perhaps he was the
Devil! Anyhow, this was certain, that three times
had a human sword been driven into him and made no
mark. When Syme had that thought he drew himself
up, and all that was good in him sang high up in the
air as a high wind sings in the trees. He thought
of all the human things in his story—of
the Chinese lanterns in Saffron Park, of the girl’s
red hair in the garden, of the honest, beer-swilling
sailors down by the dock, of his loyal companions
standing by. Perhaps he had been chosen as a champion
of all these fresh and kindly things to cross swords
with the enemy of all creation. “After
all,” he said to himself, “I am more than
a devil; I am a man. I can do the one thing which
Satan himself cannot do—I can die,”
and as the word went through his head, he heard a faint
and far-off hoot, which would soon be the roar of the
Paris train.
He fell to fighting again with a supernatural
levity, like a Mohammedan panting for Paradise.
As the train came nearer and nearer he fancied he
could see people putting up the floral arches in Paris;
he joined in the growing noise and the glory of the
great Republic whose gate he was guarding against Hell.
His thoughts rose higher and higher with the rising
roar of the train, which ended, as if proudly, in
a long and piercing whistle. The train stopped.
Suddenly, to the astonishment of everyone
the Marquis sprang back quite out of sword reach and
threw down his sword. The leap was wonderful,
and not the less wonderful because Syme had plunged
his sword a moment before into the man’s thigh.
“Stop!” said the Marquis
in a voice that compelled a momentary obedience.
“I want to say something.”
“What is the matter?”
asked Colonel Ducroix, staring. “Has there
been foul play?”
“There has been foul play somewhere,”
said Dr. Bull, who was a little pale. “Our
principal has wounded the Marquis four times at least,
and he is none the worse .”
The Marquis put up his hand with a
curious air of ghastly patience.
“Please let me speak,”
he said. “It is rather important. Mr.
Syme,” he continued, turning to his opponent,
“we are fighting today, if I remember right,
because you expressed a wish (which I thought irrational)
to pull my nose. Would you oblige me by pulling
my nose now as quickly as possible? I have to
catch a train.”
“I protest that this is most
irregular,” said Dr. Bull indignantly.
“It is certainly somewhat opposed
to precedent,” said Colonel Ducroix, looking
wistfully at his principal. “There is, I
think, one case on record (Captain Bellegarde and
the Baron Zumpt) in which the weapons were changed
in the middle of the encounter at the request of one
of the combatants. But one can hardly call one’s
nose a weapon.”
“Will you or will you not pull
my nose?” said the Marquis in exasperation.
“Come, come, Mr. Syme! You wanted to do
it, do it! You can have no conception of how
important it is to me. Don’t be so selfish!
Pull my nose at once, when I ask you!” and he
bent slightly forward with a fascinating smile.
The Paris train, panting and groaning, had grated
into a little station behind the neighbouring hill.
Syme had the feeling he had more than
once had in these adventures —the sense
that a horrible and sublime wave lifted to heaven was
just toppling over. Walking in a world he half
understood, he took two paces forward and seized the
Roman nose of this remarkable nobleman. He pulled
it hard, and it came off in his hand.
He stood for some seconds with a foolish
solemnity, with the pasteboard proboscis still between
his fingers, looking at it, while the sun and the
clouds and the wooded hills looked down upon this
imbecile scene.
The Marquis broke the silence in a
loud and cheerful voice.
“If anyone has any use for my
left eyebrow,” he said, “he can have it.
Colonel Ducroix, do accept my left eyebrow! It’s
the kind of thing that might come in useful any day,”
and he gravely tore off one of his swarthy Assyrian
brows, bringing about half his brown forehead with
it, and politely offered it to the Colonel, who stood
crimson and speechless with rage.
“If I had known,” he spluttered,
“that I was acting for a poltroon who pads himself
to fight—”
“Oh, I know, I know!”
said the Marquis, recklessly throwing various parts
of himself right and left about the field. “You
are making a mistake; but it can’t be explained
just now. I tell you the train has come into
the station!”
“Yes,” said Dr. Bull fiercely,
“and the train shall go out of the station.
It shall go out without you. We know well enough
for what devil’s work—”
The mysterious Marquis lifted his
hands with a desperate gesture. He was a strange
scarecrow standing there in the sun with half his
old face peeled off, and half another face glaring
and grinning from underneath.
“Will you drive me mad?” he cried.
“The train—”
“You shall not go by the train,”
said Syme firmly, and grasped his sword.
The wild figure turned towards Syme,
and seemed to be gathering itself for a sublime effort
before speaking.
“You great fat, blasted, blear-eyed,
blundering, thundering, brainless, Godforsaken, doddering,
damned fool!” he said without taking breath.
“You great silly, pink-faced, towheaded turnip!
You—”
“You shall not go by this train,” repeated
Syme.
“And why the infernal blazes,”
roared the other, “should I want to go by the
train?”
“We know all,” said the
Professor sternly. “You are going to Paris
to throw a bomb!”
“Going to Jericho to throw a
Jabberwock!” cried the other, tearing his hair,
which came off easily.
“Have you all got softening
of the brain, that you don’t realise what I
am? Did you really think I wanted to catch that
train? Twenty Paris trains might go by for me.
Damn Paris trains!”
“Then what did you care about?” began
the Professor.
“What did I care about?
I didn’t care about catching the train; I cared
about whether the train caught me, and now, by God!
it has caught me.”
“I regret to inform you,”
said Syme with restraint, “that your remarks
convey no impression to my mind. Perhaps if you
were to remove the remains of your original forehead
and some portion of what was once your chin, your
meaning would become clearer. Mental lucidity
fulfils itself in many ways. What do you mean
by saying that the train has caught you? It may
be my literary fancy, but somehow I feel that it ought
to mean something.”
“It means everything,”
said the other, “and the end of everything.
Sunday has us now in the hollow of his hand.”
“Us!” repeated the Professor,
as if stupefied. “What do you mean by ’us’?”
“The police, of course!”
said the Marquis, and tore off his scalp and half
his face.
The head which emerged was the blonde,
well brushed, smooth-haired head which is common in
the English constabulary, but the face was terribly
pale.
“I am Inspector Ratcliffe,”
he said, with a sort of haste that verged on harshness.
“My name is pretty well known to the police,
and I can see well enough that you belong to them.
But if there is any doubt about my position, I have
a card” and he began to pull a blue card from
his pocket.
The Professor gave a tired gesture.
“Oh, don’t show it us,”
he said wearily; “we’ve got enough of them
to equip a paper-chase.”
The little man named Bull, had, like
many men who seem to be of a mere vivacious vulgarity,
sudden movements of good taste. Here he certainly
saved the situation. In the midst of this staggering
transformation scene he stepped forward with all the
gravity and responsibility of a second, and addressed
the two seconds of the Marquis.
“Gentlemen,” he said,
“we all owe you a serious apology; but I assure
you that you have not been made the victims of such
a low joke as you imagine, or indeed of anything undignified
in a man of honour. You have not wasted your
time; you have helped to save the world. We are
not buffoons, but very desperate men at war with a
vast conspiracy. A secret society of anarchists
is hunting us like hares; not such unfortunate madmen
as may here or there throw a bomb through starvation
or German philosophy, but a rich and powerful and
fanatical church, a church of eastern pessimism, which
holds it holy to destroy mankind like vermin.
How hard they hunt us you can gather from the fact
that we are driven to such disguises as those for
which I apologise, and to such pranks as this one by
which you suffer.”
The younger second of the Marquis,
a short man with a black moustache, bowed politely,
and said—
“Of course, I accept the apology;
but you will in your turn forgive me if I decline
to follow you further into your difficulties, and
permit myself to say good morning! The sight of
an acquaintance and distinguished fellow-townsman
coming to pieces in the open air is unusual, and,
upon the whole, sufficient for one day. Colonel
Ducroix, I would in no way influence your actions,
but if you feel with me that our present society is
a little abnormal, I am now going to walk back to
the town.”
Colonel Ducroix moved mechanically,
but then tugged abruptly at his white moustache and
broke out—
“No, by George! I won’t.
If these gentlemen are really in a mess with a lot
of low wreckers like that, I’ll see them through
it. I have fought for France, and it is hard
if I can’t fight for civilization.”
Dr. Bull took off his hat and waved
it, cheering as at a public meeting.
“Don’t make too much noise,”
said Inspector Ratcliffe, “Sunday may hear you.”
“Sunday!” cried Bull, and dropped his
hat.
“Yes,” retorted Ratcliffe, “he may
be with them.”
“With whom?” asked Syme.
“With the people out of that train,” said
the other.
“What you say seems utterly
wild,” began Syme. “Why, as a matter
of fact—But, my God,” he cried out
suddenly, like a man who sees an explosion a long
way off, “by God! if this is true the whole bally
lot of us on the Anarchist Council were against anarchy!
Every born man was a detective except the President
and his personal secretary. What can it mean?”
“Mean!” said the new policeman
with incredible violence. “It means that
we are struck dead! Don’t you know Sunday?
Don’t you know that his jokes are always so
big and simple that one has never thought of them?
Can you think of anything more like Sunday than this,
that he should put all his powerful enemies on the
Supreme Council, and then take care that it was not
supreme? I tell you he has bought every trust,
he has captured every cable, he has control of every
railway line—especially of that railway
line!” and he pointed a shaking finger towards
the small wayside station. “The whole movement
was controlled by him; half the world was ready to
rise for him. But there were just five people,
perhaps, who would have resisted him . . . and the
old devil put them on the Supreme Council, to waste
their time in watching each other. Idiots that
we are, he planned the whole of our idiocies!
Sunday knew that the Professor would chase Syme through
London, and that Syme would fight me in France.
And he was combining great masses of capital, and
seizing great lines of telegraphy, while we five idiots
were running after each other like a lot of confounded
babies playing blind man’s buff.”
“Well?” asked Syme with a sort of steadiness.
“Well,” replied the other
with sudden serenity, “he has found us playing
blind man’s buff today in a field of great rustic
beauty and extreme solitude. He has probably
captured the world; it only remains to him to capture
this field and all the fools in it. And since
you really want to know what was my objection to the
arrival of that train, I will tell you. My objection
was that Sunday or his Secretary has just this moment
got out of it.”
Syme uttered an involuntary cry, and
they all turned their eyes towards the far-off station.
It was quite true that a considerable bulk of people
seemed to be moving in their direction. But they
were too distant to be distinguished in any way.
“It was a habit of the late
Marquis de St. Eustache,” said the new policeman,
producing a leather case, “always to carry a
pair of opera glasses. Either the President or
the Secretary is coming after us with that mob.
They have caught us in a nice quiet place where we
are under no temptations to break our oaths by calling
the police. Dr. Bull, I have a suspicion that
you will see better through these than through your
own highly decorative spectacles.”
He handed the field-glasses to the
Doctor, who immediately took off his spectacles and
put the apparatus to his eyes.
“It cannot be as bad as you
say,” said the Professor, somewhat shaken.
“There are a good number of them certainly, but
they may easily be ordinary tourists.”
“Do ordinary tourists,”
asked Bull, with the fieldglasses to his eyes, “wear
black masks half-way down the face?”
Syme almost tore the glasses out of
his hand, and looked through them. Most men in
the advancing mob really looked ordinary enough; but
it was quite true that two or three of the leaders
in front wore black half-masks almost down to their
mouths. This disguise is very complete, especially
at such a distance, and Syme found it impossible to
conclude anything from the clean-shaven jaws and chins
of the men talking in the front. But presently
as they talked they all smiled and one of them smiled
on one side.