<p><SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER X <br/> A VISIT TO A LADY </h3>
<p>Turning to consider the never-stale
fortunes of one of fate's bean bags——</p>
<p>Mr. Billy Capper, ejected from the Hotel
Splendide, took little umbrage at such
treatment; it was not an uncommon experience,
and, besides, a quiet triumph that would not
be dampened by trifles filled his soul.
Cheerfully he pushed through the motley crowd on
Waterport Street down to the lower levels of
the city by the Line Wall, where the roosts of
sailors and warrens of quondam adventurers
off all the seven seas made far more congenial
atmosphere than that of the Splendide's
hollow pretense. He chose a hostelry more
commensurate with his slender purse than
Almer's, though as a matter of fact the question
of paying a hotel bill was furthest from Billy
Capper's thoughts; such formal transactions
he avoided whenever feasible. The proprietor
of the San Roc, where Capper took a room, had
such an evil eye that his new guest made a
mental note that perhaps he might have to
leave his bag behind when he decamped.
Capper abhorred violence—to his own person.</p>
<p>Alone over a glass of thin wine—the champagne
days, alas! had been too fleeting—Capper
took stock of his situation and conned the
developments he hoped to be the instrument
for starting. To begin with, finances were
wretchedly bad, and that was a circumstance
so near the ordinary for Capper that he
shuddered as he pulled a gold guinea and a few
silver bits from his pocket, and mechanically
counted them over. Of the three hundred
marks Louisa—pretty snake!—had given him
in the Café Riche and the expense money he
had received from her the following day to
cover his expedition to Alexandria for the
Wilhelmstrasse naught but this paltry residue!
That second-cabin ticket on the <i>Princess Mary</i>
had taken the last big bite from his hoard, and
here he was in this black-and-tan town with a
quid and little more between himself and the
old starved-dog life.</p>
<p>But—and Capper narrowed his eyes and
sagely wagged his head—there'd be something
fat coming. When he got knee to knee with
the governor-general of the Rock, and told him
what he, Billy Capper, knew about the identity
of Captain Woodhouse, newly transferred to
the signal service at Gibraltar, why, if there
wasn't a cool fifty pounds or a matter of that
as honorarium from a generous government
Billy Capper had missed his guess; that's all.</p>
<p>"I say, Governor, of course this is very
handsome of you, but I didn't come to tell
what I know for gold. I'm a loyal Englishman,
and I've done what I have for the good
of the old flag."</p>
<p>"Quite right, Mr. Capper; quite right. But
you will please accept this little gift as an
inadequate recognition of your loyalty. Your
name shall be mentioned in my despatches home."</p>
<p>Capper rehearsed this hypothetical dialogue
with relish. He could even catch the involuntary
gasp of astonishment from the governor
when that responsible officer in his majesty's
service heard the words Capper would whisper
to him; could see the commander of the Rock
open a drawer in his desk and take therefrom
a thick white sheaf of bank-notes—count
them! Then—ah, then—the first train for
Paris and the delights of Paris at war-time
prices.</p>
<p>The little spy anticipated no difficulty in
gaining audience with the governor. Before
he had been fifteen minutes off the <i>Princess
Mary</i> he had heard the name of the present
incumbent of Government House. Crandall—Sir
George Crandall; the same who had been
in command of the forts at Rangoon back in
'99. Oh, yes, Capper knew him, and he made
no doubt that, if properly reminded of a
certain bit of work Billy Capper had done back in
the Burmese city, Sir George would recall
him—and with every reason for gratefulness.
To-morrow—yes, before ever Sir George had had
his morning's peg, Capper would present
himself at Government House and tell about that
house on Queen's Terrace at Ramleh; about
the unconscious British officer who was carried
there and hurried thence by night, and the
tall well-knit man in conference with Doctor
Koch who was now come to be a part of the
garrison of the Rock under the stolen name of
Woodhouse.</p>
<p>Capper had his dinner, then strolled around
the town to see the sights and hear what he
could hear. Listening was a passion with him.</p>
<p>For the color and the exotic savor of Gibraltar
on a hot August night Capper had no eye.
The knife edge of a moon slicing the battlements
of the old Moorish Castle up on the
heights; the minor tinkle of a guitar sounding
from a vine-curtained balcony; a Riffian
muleteer's singsong review of his fractious beast's
degraded ancestry—not for these incidentals
did the practical mind under the battered
Capper bowler have room. Rather the scraps of
information and gossip passed from one
blue-coated artilleryman off duty, to another over
a mug of ale, or the confidence of a sloe-eyed
dancer to the guitar player in a tavern; this
was meat for Capper. Carefully he husbanded
his gold piece, and judiciously he spent his
silver for drink. He enjoyed himself in the
ascetic spirit of a monk in a fast, believing
that the morrow would bring champagne in
place of the thin wine his pitiful silver could
command.</p>
<p>Then, of a sudden, he caught a glimpse of
Louisa—Louisa of the Wilhelmstrasse.
Capper's heart skipped, and an involuntary
impulse crooked his fingers into claws.</p>
<p>The girl was just coming out of a café—the
only café aspiring to Parisian smartness
Gibraltar boasts. Her head was bare. Under an
arm she had tucked a stack of cigar boxes.
Had it not been that a steady light from an
overhead arc cut her features out of the soft
shadow with the fineness of a diamond-pointed
tool, Capper would have sworn his eyes were
playing him tricks. But Louisa's features
were unmistakable, whether in the Lucullian
surroundings of a Berlin summer garden or
here on a street in Gibraltar. Capper had
instinctively crushed himself against the
nearest wall on seeing the girl; the crowd had come
between himself and her, and she had not
seen him.</p>
<p>All the weasel instinct of the man came
instantly to the fore that second of recognition,
and the glint in his eyes and baring of his
teeth were flashed from brute instinct—the
instinct of the night-prowling meat hunter.
All the vicious hate which the soul of Billy
Capper could distil flooded to his eyes and
made them venomous. Slinking, dodging,
covering, he followed the girl with the cigar
boxes. She entered several dance-halls,
offered her wares at the door of a cheap hotel.
For more than an hour Capper shadowed her
through the twisting streets of the old
Spanish town. Finally she turned into a narrow
lane, climbed flagstone steps, set the width of
the lane, to a house under the scarp of a cliff,
and let herself in at the street door. Capper,
following to the door as quickly as he dared,
found it locked.</p>
<p>The little spy was choking with a lust to
kill; his whole body trembled under the pulse
of a murderous passion. He had found Louisa—the
girl who had sold him out—and for her
private ends, Capper made no doubt of that.
Some day he had hoped to run her down, and
with his fingers about her soft throat to tell her
how dangerous it was to trick Billy Capper.
But to have her flung across his path this way
when anger was still at white heat in him—this
was luck! He'd see this Louisa and have
a little powwow with her even if he had to
break his way into the house.</p>
<p>Capper felt the doorknob again; the door
wouldn't yield. He drew back a bit and
looked up at the front of the house. Just a
dingy black wall with three unlighted windows
set in it irregularly. The roof projected over
the gabled attic like the visor of a cap.
Beyond the farther corner of the house were ten
feet of garden space, and then the bold rock of
the cliff springing upward. A low wall
bounded the garden; over its top nodded the pale
ghosts of moonflowers and oleanders.</p>
<p>Capper was over the wall in a bound, and
crouching amid flower clusters, listening for
possible alarm. None came, and he became
bolder. Skirting a tiny arbor, he skulked to a
position in the rear of the house; there a broad
patch of illumination stretched across the
garden, coming from two French windows on the
lower floor. They stood half open; through
the thin white stuff hanging behind them
Capper could see vaguely the figure of a girl
seated before a dressing mirror with her hands
busy over two heavy ropes of hair. Nothing
to do but step up on the little half balcony
outside the windows, push through into the room,
and—have a little powwow with Louisa.</p>
<p>An unwonted boldness had a grip on the little
spy. Never a person to force a face-to-face
issue when the trick could be turned
behind somebody's back, he was, nevertheless,
driven irresistibly by a furious anger that
took no heed of consequences.</p>
<p>With the light foot of a cat, Capper straddled
the low rail of the balcony, pushed back
one of the partly opened windows, and stepped
into Louisa's room. His eyes registered
mechanically the details—a heavy canopied bed,
a massive highboy of some dark wood, chairs
supporting carelessly flung bits of wearing
apparel. But he noted especially that just as he
emerged from behind one of the loose curtains
a white arm remained poised over a brown head.</p>
<p>"Stop where you are, Billy Capper!" The
girl's low-spoken order was as cold and tense
as drawn wire. No trace of shock or surprise
was in her voice. She did not turn her head.
Capper was brought up short, as if he felt a
noose about his neck.</p>
<p>Slowly the figure seated before the dressing
mirror turned to face him. Tumbling hair
framed the girl's face, partly veiling the
yellow-brown eyes, which seemed two spots of
metal coming to incandescence under heat.
Her hands, one still holding a comb, lay
supinely in her lap.</p>
<p>"I admit this is a surprise, Capper," Louisa
said, letting each word fall sharply, but
without emphasis. "However, it is like you to
be—unconventional. May I ask what you want
this time—besides money, of course?"</p>
<p>Capper wet his lips and smiled wryly. He
had jumped so swiftly to impulse that he had
not prepared himself beforehand against the
moment when he should be face to face with
the girl from the Wilhelmstrasse. Moreover,
he had expected to be closer to her—very close
indeed—before the time for words should
come.</p>
<p>"I—I saw you to-night and followed
you—here," he began lamely.</p>
<p>"Flattering!" She laughed shortly.</p>
<p>"Oh, you needn't try to come it over me with
words!" Capper's teeth showed in a nasty
grin as his rage flared back from the first
suppression of surprise. "I've come here to have
a settlement for a little affair between you and
me."</p>
<p>"Blackmail? Why, Billy Capper, how true
to form you run!" The yellow-brown eyes
were alight and burning now. "Have you
determined the sum you want or are you in the
open market?"</p>
<p>Capper grinned again, and shifted his
weight, inadvertently advancing one foot a
little nearer the seated girl as he did so.</p>
<p>"Pretty quick with the tongue—as always,"
he sneered. "But this time it doesn't go,
Louisa. You pay differently this time—pay for
selling me out. Understand!" Again one foot
shifted forward a few inches by the accident of
some slight body movement on the man's part.
Louisa still sat before her dressing mirror,
hands carelessly crossed on her lap.</p>
<p>"Selling you out?" she repeated evenly.
"Oh! So you finally did discover that you
were elected to be the goat? Brilliant
Capper! How long before you made up your
mind you had a grievance?"</p>
<p>The girl's cool admission goaded the little
man's fury to frenzy. His mind craved for
action—for the leap and the tightening of
fingers around that taunting throat; but
somehow his body, strangely detached from the fiat
of volition as if it were another's body, lagged
to the command. Violence had never been its
mission; muscles were slow to accept this new
conception of the mind. But the man's feet
followed their crafty intelligence; by fractions
of inches they moved forward stealthily.</p>
<p>"You wouldn't be here now," Louisa coldly
went on, "if you weren't fortune's bright-eyed
boy. You were slated to be taken off the boat
at Malta and shot; the boat didn't stop at
Malta through no fault of ours, and so you arrived
at Alexandria—and became a nuisance." One
of the girl's hands lifted from her lap and
lazily played along the edge of the rosewood
standard which supported the mirror on the
dressing table. It stopped at a curiously
carved rosette in the rococo scroll-work.
Capper's suspicious eye noted the movement. He
sparred for time—the time needed by those
stealthy feet to shorten the distance between
themselves and the girl.</p>
<p>"Why," he hissed, "why did you give me a
number with the Wilhelmstrasse and send me
to Alexandria if I was to be caught and shot at
Malta? That's what I'm here to find out."</p>
<p>"Excellent Capper!" Her fingers were playing
with the convolutions of the carved rosette.
"Intelligent Capper! He comes to a
lady's room at night to find the answer to a
simple question. He shall have it. He
evidently does not know the method of the
Wilhelmstrasse, which is to choose two men for
every task to be accomplished. One—the
'target,' we call him—goes first; our friends
whose secrets we seek are allowed to become
suspicious of him—we even give them a hint
to help them in their suspicion. They seize
the 'target,' and in time of war he becomes a
real target for a firing squad, as you should
have been, Capper, at Malta. Then when our
friends believe they have nipped our move in
the bud follows the second man—who turns
the trick."</p>
<p>Capper was still wrestling with that baffling
stubbornness of the body. Each word the girl
uttered was like vitriol on his writhing soul.
His mind willed murder—willed it with all the
strength of hate; but still the springs of his
body were cramped—by what? Not cowardice,
for he was beyond reckoning results.
Certainly not compassion or any saving virtue of
chivalry. Why did his eyes constantly stray
to that white hand lifted to allow the fingers
to play with the filigree of wood on the mirror
support?</p>
<p>"Then you engineered the stealing of my
number—from the hollow under the handle of
my cane—some time between Paris and
Alexandria?" he challenged in a whisper, his face
thrust forward between hunched shoulders.</p>
<p>"No, indeed. It was necessary for you to
have—the evidence of your profession when
the English searched you at Malta. But the
loss of your number is not news; Koch, in
Alexandria, has reported, of course."</p>
<p>The girl saw Capper's foot steal forward
again. He was not six feet from her now.
His wiry body settled itself ever so slightly
for a spring. Louisa rose from her chair, one
hand still resting on the wooden rosette of the
mirror standard. She began to speak in a
voice drained of all emotion:</p>
<p>"You followed me here to-night, Billy Capper,
imagining in your poor little soul that you
were going to do something desperate—something
really human and brutal. You came in
my window all primed for murder. But your
poor little soul all went to water the instant
we faced each other. You couldn't nerve
yourself to leap upon a woman even. You
can't now."</p>
<p>She smiled on him—a woman's flaying
smile of pity. Capper writhed, and his
features twisted themselves in a paroxysm of
hate.</p>
<p>"I have my finger on a bell button here, Capper.
If I press it men will come in here and
kill you without asking a question. Now you'd
better go."</p>
<p>Capper's eyes jumped to focus on a round
white nib under one of the girl's fingers there
on the mirror's standard. The little ivory
button was alive—a sentient thing suddenly
allied against him. That inanimate object
rather than Louisa's words sent fingers of cold
fear to grip his heart. A little ivory button
waiting there to trap him! He tried to cover
his vanished resolution with bluster, sputtering
out in a tense whisper:</p>
<p>"You're a devil—a devil from hell, Louisa!
But I'll get you. They shoot women in war
time! Sir George Crandall—I know him—I
did a little service for him once in Rangoon.
He'll hear of you and your Wilhelmstrasse
tricks, and you'll have your pretty back
against a wall with guns at your heart before
to-morrow night. Remember—before to-morrow night!"</p>
<p>Capper was backing toward the open window
behind him. The girl still stood by the
mirror, her hand lightly resting where the
ivory nib was. She laughed.</p>
<p>"Very well, Billy Capper. It will be a firing
party for two—you and me together. I'll
make a frank confession—tell all the information
Billy Capper sold to me for three hundred
marks one night in the Café Riche—the story
of the Anglo-Belgian defense arrangements.
The same Billy Capper, I'll say, who sold the
Lord Fisher letters to the kaiser—a cable to
Downing Street will confirm that identification
inside of two hours. And then——"</p>
<p>"And your Captain Woodhouse—your cute
little Wilhelmstrasse captain," Capper flung
back from the window, pretending not to heed
the girl's potent threat; "I know all about him,
and the governor'll know, too—same time he
hears about you!"</p>
<p>"Good night, Billy Capper," Louisa
answered, with a piquant smile. "And au
revoir until we meet with our backs against
that wall."</p>
<p>Capper's head dropped from view over the
balcony edge; there was a sound of running
feet amid the close-ranked plants in the
garden, then silence.</p>
<p>The girl from the Wilhelmstrasse, alone in
the house save for the bent old housekeeper
asleep in her attic, turned and laid her
head—a bit weakly—against the carved standard,
where in a florid rosette showed the ivory tip
of the hinge for the cheval glass.</p>
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