madness; it is the fault of all the organizations that seek to right wrong by indiscriminate crime, whose sense are senses, who have debased sentiment to sentimentality, and who muddle kings with kingship.'
'You are of the Red Hundred?' asked Manfred.
'Yes,' said the other, 'because the Red Hundred carries me a little way along the road I wish to travel.'
'In the direction?'
'Who knows?' replied the other. 'There are no straight roads, and you cannot judge where lies your destination by the direction the first line of path takes.'
'I do not tell you how great a risk you take upon yourself,' said Manfred, 'nor do I labour the extent of the responsibility you ask to undertake. You are a wealthy man?'
'Yes,' said Courtlander, 'as wealth goes; I have large estates in Hungary.'
'I do not ask that question aimlessly, yet it would make no difference if you were poor,' said Manfred. 'Are you prepared to sell your estates--Buda-Gratz I believe they are called--Highness?'
For the first time the young man smiled.
'I did not doubt but that you knew me,' he said; 'as to my estates I will sell them without hesitation.'
'And place the money at my disposal?'
'Yes,' he replied, instantly. 'Without reservation?'
'Without reservation.'
'And,' said Manfred, slowly, 'if we felt disposed to employ this money for what might seem our own personal benefit, would you take exception?'
'None,' said the young man, calmly.
'And as a proof?' demanded Poiccart, leaning a little forward.
'The word of a Hap--'
'Enough,' said Manfred; 'we do not want your money--yet money is the supreme test.' He pondered awhile before he spoke again.
'There is the Woman of Gratz,' he said abruptly; 'at the worst she must be killed.'
'It is a pity,' said Courtlander, a little sadly. He had answered the final test did he but know it. A too willing compliance, an over-eagerness to agree with the supreme sentence of the 'Four', any one thing that might have betrayed the lack of that exact balance of mind, which their word demanded, would have irretrievably condemned him.
'Let us drink an arrogant toast,' said Manfred, beckoning a waiter. The wine was opened and the glasses filled, and Manfred muttered the toast.
'The Four who were three, to the Fourth who died and the Fourth who is born.'
Once upon a time there was a fourth who fell riddled with bullets in a Bordeaux cafe, and him they pledged. In Middlesex Street, in the almost emptied hall, Falmouth stood at bay before an army of reporters.
'Were they the Four Just Men, Mr. Falmouth?'
'Did you see them?'
'Have you any clue?'
Every second brought a fresh batch of newspaper men, taxi after taxi came into the dingy street, and the string of vehicles lined up outside the hall was suggestive of a fashionable gathering. The Telephone Tragedy was still fresh in the public mind, and it needed no more than the utterance of the magical words 'Four Just Men' to fan the spark of interest to flame again. The delegates of the Red Hundred formed a privileged throng in the little wilderness of a forecourt, and through these the journalists circulated industriously.
Smith of the Megaphone and his youthful assistant, Maynard, slipped through the crowd and found their taxi.
Smith shouted a direction to the driver and sank back in the seat with a whistle of weariness.
'Did you hear those chaps talking about police protection?' he asked; 'all the blessed anarchists from all over the world--and talking like a mothers' meeting! To hear 'em you would think they were the most respectable members of society that the world had ever seen. Our civilization is a wonderful thing,' he added, cryptically.
'One man,' said Maynard, 'asked me in very bad French if the conduct of the Four Just Men was actionable!'
At that moment, another question was being put to Falmouth by a leader of the Red Hundred, and Falmouth, a little ruffled in his temper, replied with all the urbanity that he could summon.
'You may have your meetings,' he said with some asperity, 'so long as you do not utter anything calculated to bring about a breach of the peace, you may talk sedition and anarchy till you're blue in the face. Your English friends will tell you how far you can go--and I might say you can go pretty far--you can advocate the assassination of kings, so long as you don't specify which king; you can plot against governments and denounce armies and grand dukes; in fact, you can do as you please--because that's the law.'
'What is--a breach of the peace?' asked his interrogator, repeating the words with difficulty.
Another detective explained.
Francois and one Rudulph Starque escorted the Woman of Gratz to her Bloomsbury lodgings that night, and they discussed the detective's answer.
This Starque was a big man, strongly built, with a fleshy face and little pouches under his eyes. He was reputed to be
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