<p><SPAN name="chap17"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER XVII <br/> THREE-THIRTY A.M. </h3>
<p>Joseph Almer and Captain Woodhouse
sat in the darkened and heavily blinded
office-reception room of the Hotel Splendide.
All the hotel had long since been put to bed,
and the silence in the rambling house was
audible. The hands of the Dutch clock on the wall
were pointing to the hour of three-thirty.</p>
<p>Strain was on both the men. They spoke in
monosyllables, and only occasionally. Almer's
hand went out from time to time to lift a squat
bottle of brandy from the table between them
and pour a tiny glass brimful; he quaffed with
a sucking noise. Woodhouse did not drink.</p>
<p>"It is three-thirty," the latter fretted, with
an eye on the mottled clock dial.</p>
<p>"He will come," Almer assured. A long pause.</p>
<p>"This man Jaimihr—he is thoroughly
dependable?" The man in uniform put the
question with petulant bruskness.</p>
<p>"It is his passion—what we are to do
to-night—something he has lived for—his
religion. Nothing except judgment day
could—— Hah!"</p>
<p>The sharp chirp of a telephone bell, a
dagger of sound in the silence, broke Almer's
speech. He bounded to his feet; but not so
quickly as Woodhouse, who was across the
room in a single stride and had the receiver
to his ear.</p>
<p>"Well, well! Yes, this is the one you
name." Woodhouse turned to Almer, and his lips
framed the word Jaimihr. "Yes, yes; all is
well—and waiting. Bishop? He is beyond
interference—coming down the Rock—I did the
work silently. What's that?" Woodhouse's
face was tensed in strain; his right hand went
to a breast pocket and brought out a pencil.
With it he began making memoranda on the
face of a calendar by his side.</p>
<p>"Seven turns—ah, yes—four to the
left—correct." His writing hand was moving
swiftly. "Press, one to the right. Good! I have
it, and am off at once. Good-by!"</p>
<p>Woodhouse finished a line of script on the
calendar face, hung up the receiver. He
carefully tore the written notes from the calendar
and put them into his pocket.</p>
<p>"Jaimihr says he has work to do at Government
House and can not come down." Woodhouse
turned to Almer and explained in rapid
sentences. "But he's given me the combination—to
Room D—over the wire, and now I'm off!"</p>
<p>Almer was all excitement now. He hovered
lovingly about Woodhouse, patting him on the
shoulder, giving him his helmet, mothering
him with little cooing noises.</p>
<p>"Speed quickly, Nineteen Thirty-two! Up
the Rock to the signal tower, Nineteen
Thirty-two, to do the deed that will boom around
the world. The switches—one pull, my brother,
and the fatherland is saved to triumph over
her enemies, victorious!"</p>
<p>"Right, Almer!" Woodhouse was moving
toward the door. "In eight minutes history
will be made. The minute you hear the blast,
start for Spain. I will try to escape, but I
doubt——"</p>
<p>A knock came at the barred front door—one
knock, followed by three. Both men were
transfixed. Almer, first to recover his
calmness, motioned Woodhouse through the door to
the dining-room. When his companion had
disappeared, he stepped to the door and
cautiously asked: "Who knocks?"</p>
<p>An answer came that caused him to shoot
back the bolts and thrust out his head. A
message was hurriedly whispered into his ear. The
Splendide's proprietor withdrew his head and
slipped the bolt home again. His face was a
thundercloud as he summoned Woodhouse; his
breath came in wheezy gasps.</p>
<p>"My Arab boy comes to the door just now
to tell me of Louisa's fate; she has been
arrested," he said.</p>
<p>"Come, Almer! I am going to the signal
tower—there is still time for us to strike."</p>
<p>Out on to Waterport Street leaped Woodhouse,
and the door closed behind him.</p>
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