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<h2> XIII </h2>
<h3> THE DRAFT ON PARIS </h3>
<p>For close upon a month Soames performed the duties imposed upon him in the
household of Henry Leroux. He was unable to discover, despite a careful
course of inquiry from the cook and the housemaid, that Mrs. Leroux
frequently absented herself. But the servants were newly engaged, for the
flat in Palace Mansions had only recently been leased by the Leroux. He
gathered that they had formerly lived much abroad, and that their marriage
had taken place in Paris. Mrs. Leroux had been to visit a friend in the
French capital once, he understood, since the housemaid had been in her
employ.</p>
<p>The mistress (said the housemaid) did not care twopence-ha'penny for her
husband; she had married him for his money, and for nothing else. She had
had an earlier love (declared the cook) and was pining away to a mere
shadow because of her painful memories. During the last six months (the
period of the cook's service) Mrs. Leroux had altered out of all
recognition. The cook was of opinion that she drank secretly.</p>
<p>Of Mr. Leroux, Soames formed the poorest opinion. He counted him a
spiritless being, whose world was bounded by his book-shelves, and whose
wife would be a fool if she did not avail herself of the liberty which his
neglect invited her to enjoy. Soames felt himself, not a snake in the
grass, but a benefactor—a friend in need—a champion come to
the defense of an unhappy and persecuted woman.</p>
<p>He wondered when an opportunity should arise which would enable him to
commence his chivalrous operations; almost daily he anticipated
instructions to the effect that Mrs. Leroux would be leaving for Paris
immediately. But the days glided by and the weeks glided by, without
anything occurring to break the monotony of the Leroux household.</p>
<p>Mr. Soames sought an opportunity to express his respectful readiness to
Mrs. Leroux; but the lady was rarely visible outside her own apartments
until late in the day, when she would be engaged in preparing for the
serious business of the evening: one night a dance, another, a
bridge-party; so it went. Mr. Leroux rarely joined her upon these festive
expeditions, but clung to his study like Diogenes to his tub.</p>
<p>Great was Mr. Soames' contempt; bitter were the reproaches of the cook;
dark were the predictions of the housemaid.</p>
<p>At last, however, Soames, feeling himself neglected, seized an opportunity
which offered to cement the secret bond (the TOO secret bond) existing
between himself and the mistress of the house.</p>
<p>Meeting her one afternoon in the lobby, which she was crossing on the way
from her bedroom to the drawing-room, he stood aside to let her pass,
whispering:</p>
<p>“At your service, whenever you are ready, madam!”</p>
<p>It was a non-committal remark, which, if she chose to keep up the comedy,
he could explain away by claiming it to refer to the summoning of the car
from the garage—for Mrs. Leroux was driving out that afternoon.</p>
<p>She did not endeavor to evade the occult meaning of the words, however. In
the wearily dreamy manner which, when first he had seen her, had aroused
Soames' respectful interest, she raised her thin hand to her hair, slowly
pressing it back from her brow, and directed her big eyes vacantly upon
him.</p>
<p>“Yes, Soames,” she said (her voice had a faraway quality in keeping with
the rest of her personality), “Mr. King speaks well of you. But please do
not refer again to”—she glanced in a manner at once furtive and
sorrowful, in the direction of the study-door—“to the ... little
arrangement of”...</p>
<p>She passed on, with the slow, gliding gait, which, together with her
fragility, sometimes lent her an almost phantomesque appearance.</p>
<p>This was comforting, in its degree; since it proved that the smiling
Gianapolis had in no way misled him (Soames). But as a man of business,
Mr. Soames was not fully satisfied. He selected an evening when Mrs.
Leroux was absent—and indeed she was absent almost every evening,
for Leroux entertained but little. The cook and the housemaid were absent,
also; therefore, to all intents and purposes, Soames had the flat to
himself; since Henry Leroux counted in that establishment, not as an
entity, but rather as a necessary, if unornamental, portion of the
fittings.</p>
<p>Standing in the lobby, Soames raised the telephone receiver, and having
paused with closed eyes preparing the exact form of words in which he
should address his invisible employer, he gave the number: East 18642.</p>
<p>Following a brief delay:—</p>
<p>“Yes,” came a nasal voice, “who is it?”</p>
<p>“Soames! I want to speak to Mr. King!”</p>
<p>The words apparently surprised the man at the other end of the wire, for
he hesitated ere inquiring:—</p>
<p>“What did you say your name was?”</p>
<p>“Soames—Luke Soames.”</p>
<p>“Hold on!”</p>
<p>Soames, with closed eyes, and holding the receiver to his ear, silently
rehearsed again the exact wording of his speech. Then:—</p>
<p>“Hullo!” came another voice—“is that Mr. Soames?”</p>
<p>“Yes! Is that Mr. Gianapolis speaking?”</p>
<p>“It is, my dear Soames!” replied the sing-song voice; and Soames, closing
his eyes again, had before him a mental picture of the radiantly smiling
Greek.</p>
<p>“Yes, my dear Soames,” continued Gianapolis; “here I am. I hope you are
quite well—perfectly well?”</p>
<p>“I am perfectly well, thank you; but as a man of business, it has occurred
to me that failing a proper agreement—which in this case I know
would be impossible—a trifling advance on the first quarter's”...</p>
<p>“On your salary, my dear Soames! On your salary? Payment for the first
quarter shall be made to you to-morrow, my dear Soames! Why ever did you
not express the wish before? Certainly, certainly!”...</p>
<p>“Will it be sent to me?”</p>
<p>“My dear fellow! How absurd you are! Can you get out to-morrow evening
about nine o'clock?”</p>
<p>“Yes, easily.”</p>
<p>“Then I will meet you at the corner of Victoria Street, by the hotel, and
hand you your first quarter's salary. Will that be satisfactory?”</p>
<p>“Perfectly,” said Soames, his small eyes sparkling with avarice. “Most
decidedly, Mr. Gianapolis. Many thanks.”...</p>
<p>“And by the way,” continued the other, “it is rather fortunate that you
rang me up this evening, because it has saved me the trouble of ringing
you up.”</p>
<p>“What?”—Soames' eyes half closed, from the bottom lids upwards:—“there
is something”...</p>
<p>“There is a trifling service which I require of you—yes, my dear
Soames.”</p>
<p>“Is it?”...</p>
<p>“We will discuss the matter to-morrow evening. Oh! it is a mere trifle. So
good-by for the present.”</p>
<p>Soames, with the fingers of his two hands interlocked before him, and his
thumbs twirling rapidly around one another, stood in the lobby, gazing
reflectively at the rug-strewn floor. He was working out in his mind how
handsomely this first payment would show up on the welcome side of his
passbook. Truly, he was fortunate in having met the generous
Gianapolis....</p>
<p>He thought of a trifling indiscretion committed at the expense of one Mr.
Mapleson, and of the wine-bill of Colonel Hewett; and he thought of the
apparently clairvoyant knowledge of the Greek. A cloud momentarily came
between his perceptive and the rosy horizon.</p>
<p>But nearer to the foreground of the mental picture, uprose a left-hand
page of his pass book; and its tidings of great joy, written in clerkly
hand, served to dispel the cloud.</p>
<p>Soames sighed in gentle rapture, and, soft-footed, passed into his own
room.</p>
<p>Certainly his duties were neither difficult nor unpleasant. The mistress
of the house lived apparently in a hazy dream-world of her own, and Mr.
Leroux was the ultimate expression of the non-commercial. Mr. Soames could
have robbed him every day had he desired to do so; but he had refrained
from availing himself even of those perquisites which he considered justly
his; for it was evident, to his limited intelligence, that greater profit
was to be gained by establishing himself in this household than by
weeding-out five shillings here, and half-a-sovereign there, at the risk
of untimely dismissal.</p>
<p>Yet—it was a struggle! All Mr. Soames' commercial instincts were up
in arms against this voice of a greater avarice which counseled
abstention. For instance: he could have added half-a-sovereign a week to
his earnings by means of a simple arrangement with the local wine
merchant. Leroux's cigars he could have sold by the hundreds; for Leroux,
when a friend called, would absently open a new box, entirely forgetful of
the fact that a box from which but two—or at most three—cigars
had been taken, lay already on the bureau.</p>
<p>Mr. Soames, in order to put his theories to the test, had temporarily
abstracted half-a-dozen such boxes from the study and the dining-room and
had hidden them. Leroux, finding, as he supposed, that he was out of
cigars, had simply ordered Soames to get him some more.</p>
<p>“Er—about a dozen boxes—er—Soames,” he had said; “of the
same sort!”</p>
<p>Was ever a man of business submitted to such an ordeal? After receiving
those instructions, Soames had sat for close upon an hour in his own room,
contemplating the six broken boxes, containing in all some five hundred
and ninety cigars; but the voice within prevailed; he must court no chance
of losing his situation; therefore, he “discovered” these six boxes in a
cupboard—much to Henry Leroux's surprise!</p>
<p>Then, Leroux regularly sent him to the Charing Cross branch of the London
County and Suburban Bank with open checks! Sometimes, he would be sent to
pay in, at other times to withdraw; the amounts involved varying from one
guinea to 150 pounds! But, as he told himself, on almost every occasion
that he went to Leroux's bank, he was deliberately throwing money away,
deliberately closing his eyes to the good fortune which this careless and
gullible man cast in his path. He observed a scrupulous honesty in all
these dealings, with the result that the bank manager came to regard him
as a valuable and trustworthy servant, and said as much to the assistant
manager, expressing his wonder that Leroux—whose account occasioned
the bank more anxiety, and gave it more work, than that of any other two
depositors—had at last engaged a man who would keep his business
affairs in order!</p>
<p>And these were but a few of the golden apples which Mr. Soames permitted
to slip through his fingers, so steadfast was he in his belief that
Gianapolis would be as good as his word, and make his fortune.</p>
<p>Leroux employed no secretary; and his MSS. were typed at his agent's
office. A most slovenly man in all things, and in business matters
especially, he was the despair, not only of his banker, but of his broker;
he was a man who, in professional parlance, “deserved to be robbed.” It is
improbable that he had any but the haziest ideas, at any particular time,
respecting the state of his bank balance and investments. He detested the
writing of business letters, and was always at great pains to avoid
anything in the nature of a commercial rendezvous. He would sign any
document which his lawyer or his broker cared to send him, with simple,
unquestioned faith.</p>
<p>His bank he never visited, and his appearance was entirely unfamiliar to
the staff. True, the manager knew him slightly, having had two interviews
with him: one when the account was opened, and the second when Leroux
introduced his solicitor and broker—in order that in the future he
might not be troubled in any way with business affairs.</p>
<p>Mr. Soames perceived more and more clearly that the mild deception
projected was unlikely to be discovered by its victim; and, at the
appointed time, he hastened to the corner of Victoria Street, to his
appointment with Gianapolis. The latter was prompt, for Soames perceived
his radiant smile afar off.</p>
<p>The saloon bar of the Red Lion was affably proposed by Mr. Gianapolis as a
suitable spot to discuss the business. Soames agreed, not without certain
inward qualms; for the proximity of the hostelry to New Scotland Yard was
a disquieting circumstance.</p>
<p>However, since Gianapolis affected to treat their negotiations in the
light of perfectly legitimate business, he put up no protest, and
presently found himself seated in a very cozy corner of the saloon bar,
with a glass of whisky-and-soda on a little table before him, bubbling in
a manner which rendered it an agreeable and refreshing sight in the eyes
of Mr. Soames.</p>
<p>“You know,” said Gianapolis, the gaze of his left eye bisecting that of
his right in a most bewildering manner, “they call this 'the 'tec's
tabernacle!'”</p>
<p>“Indeed,” said Soames, without enthusiasm; “I suppose some of the Scotland
Yard men do drop in now and then?”</p>
<p>“Beyond doubt, my dear Soames.”</p>
<p>Soames responded to his companion's radiant smile with a smile of his own
by no means so pleasant to look upon. Soames had the type of face which,
in repose, might be the face of an honest man; but his smile would have
led to his instant arrest on any racecourse in Europe: it was the smile of
a pick-pocket.</p>
<p>“Now,” continued Gianapolis, “here is a quarter's salary in advance.”</p>
<p>From a pocket-book, he took a little brown paper envelope and from the
brown paper envelope counted out four five-pound notes, five golden
sovereigns, one half-sovereign, and ten shillings' worth of silver.
Soames' eyes glittered, delightedly.</p>
<p>“A little informal receipt?” smiled Gianapolis, raising his eyebrows,
satanically. “Here on this page of my notebook I have written: 'Received
from Mr. King for service rendered, 26 pounds, being payment, in advance,
of amount due on 31st October 19—' I have attached a stamp to the
page, as you will see,” continued Gianapolis, “and here is a fountain-pen.
Just sign across the stamp, adding to-day's date.”</p>
<p>Soames complied with willing alacrity; and Gianapolis having carefully
blotted the signature, replaced the notebook in his pocket, and politely
acknowledged the return of the fountain-pen. Soames, glancing furtively
about him, replaced the money in the envelope, and thrust the latter
carefully into a trouser pocket.</p>
<p>“Now,” resumed Gianapolis, “we must not permit our affairs of business to
interfere with our amusements.”</p>
<p>He stepped up to the bar and ordered two more whiskies with soda. These
being sampled, business was resumed.</p>
<p>“To-morrow,” said Gianapolis, leaning forward across the table so that his
face almost touched that of his companion, “you will be entrusted by Mr.
Leroux with a commission.”...</p>
<p>Soames nodded eagerly, his eyes upon the speaker's face.</p>
<p>“You will accompany Mrs. Leroux to the bank,” continued Gianapolis, “in
order that she may write a specimen signature, in the presence of the
manager, for transmission to the Credit Lyonnais in Paris.”...</p>
<p>Soames nearly closed his little eyes in his effort to comprehend.</p>
<p>“A draft in her favor,” continued the Greek, “has been purchased by Mr.
Leroux's bank from the Paris bank, and, on presentation of this, a
checkbook will be issued to Mrs. Leroux by the Credit Lyonnais in Paris to
enable her to draw at her convenience upon that establishment against the
said order. Do you follow me?”</p>
<p>Soames nodded rapidly, eager to exhibit an intelligent grasp of the
situation.</p>
<p>“Now”—Gianapolis lowered his voice impressively—“no one at the
Charing Cross branch of the London County and Suburban Bank has ever seen
Mrs. Leroux!—Oh! we have been careful of that, and we shall be
careful in the future. You are known already as an accredited agent of
Leroux; therefore”—he bent yet closer to Soames' ear—“you will
direct the chauffeur to drop you, not at the Strand entrance, but at the
side entrance. You follow?”</p>
<p>Soames, almost holding his breath, nodded again.</p>
<p>“At the end of the court, in which the latter entrance is situated, a lady
dressed in the same manner as Mrs. Leroux (this is arranged) will be
waiting. Mrs. Leroux will walk straight up the court, into the corridor of
Bank Chambers by the back entrance, and from thence out into the Strand.
YOU will escort the second lady into the manager's office, and she will
sign 'Mira Leroux' instead of the real Mira Leroux.”...</p>
<p>Soames became aware that he was changing color. This was a superior
felony, and as such it awed his little mind. It was tantamount to burning
his boats. Missing silver spoons and cooked petty cash were trivialities
usually expiable at the price of a boot-assisted dismissal; but this—!</p>
<p>“You understand?” Gianapolis was not smiling, now. “There is not the
slightest danger. The signature of the lady whom you will meet will be an
exact duplicate of the real one; that is, exact enough to deceive a man
who is not looking for a forgery. But it would not be exact enough to
deceive the French banker—he WILL be looking for a forgery. You
follow me? The signature on the checks drawn against the Credit Lyonnais
will be the SAME as the specimen forwarded by the London County and
Suburban, since they will be written by the same lady—the duplicate
Mrs. Leroux. Therefore, the French bank will have no means of detecting
the harmless little deception practised upon them, and the English bank,
if it should ever see those checks, will raise no question, since the
checks will have been honored by the Credit Lyonnais.”</p>
<p>Soames finished his whisky-and-soda at a gulp.</p>
<p>“Finally,” concluded Gianapolis, “you will escort the lady out by the
front entrance to the Strand. She will leave you and walk in an easterly
direction—making some suitable excuse if the manager should insist
upon seeing her to the door; and the real Mrs. Leroux will come out by the
Strand end of Bank Chambers' corridor, and walk back with you around the
corner to where the car will be waiting. Perfect?”</p>
<p>“Quite,” said Soames, huskily....</p>
<p>But when, some twenty minutes later, he returned to Palace Mansions, he
was a man lost in thought; and he did not entirely regain his wonted
composure, and did not entirely shake off the incubus, Doubt, until in his
own room he had re-counted the contents of the brown paper envelope. Then:—</p>
<p>“It's safe enough,” he muttered; “and it's worth it!”</p>
<p>Thus it came about that, on the following morning, Leroux called him into
the study and gave him just such instructions as Gianapolis had outlined
the evening before.</p>
<p>“I am—er—too busy to go myself, Soames,” said Leroux, “and—er—Mrs.
Leroux will shortly be paying a visit to friends in—er—in
Paris. So that I am opening a credit there for her. Save so much trouble—and—such
a lot of—correspondence—international money orders—and
such worrying things. Mr. Smith, the manager, knows you and you will take
this letter of authority. The draft I understand has already been
purchased.”</p>
<p>Mr. Soames was bursting with anxiety to learn the amount of this draft,
but could find no suitable opportunity to inquire. The astonishing
deception, then, was carried out without anything resembling a hitch. Mrs.
Leroux went through with her part in the comedy, in the dreamy manner of a
somnambulist; and the duplicate Mrs. Leroux, who waited at the appointed
spot, had achieved so startling a resemblance to her prototype, that Mr.
Soames became conscious of a craving for a peg of brandy at the moment of
setting eyes upon her. However, he braced himself up and saw the business
through.</p>
<p>As was to be expected, no questions were raised and no doubts entertained.
The bank manager was very courteous and very reserved, and the fictitious
Mrs. Leroux equally reserved, indeed, cold. She avoided raising her motor
veil, and, immediately the business was concluded, took her departure, Mr.
Smith escorting her as far as the door.</p>
<p>She walked away toward Fleet Street, and the respectful attendant, Soames,
toward Charing Cross; he rejoined Mrs. Leroux at the door of Bank
Chambers, and the two turned the corner and entered the waiting car.
Soames was rather nervous; Mrs. Leroux quite apathetic.</p>
<p>Shortly after this event, Soames learnt that the date of Mrs. Leroux's
departure to Paris was definitely fixed. He received from her hands a
large envelope.</p>
<p>“For Mr. King,” she said, in her dreamy fashion; and he noticed that she
seemed to be in poorer health than usual. Her mouth twitched strangely;
she was a nervous wreck.</p>
<p>Then came her departure, attended by a certain bustle, an appointment with
Mr. Gianapolis; and the delivery of the parcel into that gentleman's
keeping.</p>
<p>Mrs. Leroux was away for six days on this occasion. Leroux sent her three
postcards during that time, and re-addressed some ten or twelve letters
which arrived for her. The address in all cases was:</p>
<p>c/o Miss Denise Ryland,<br/>
Atelier 4, Rue du Coq d'Or,<br/>
Montmartre,<br/>
Paris.<br/></p>
<p>East 18642 was much in demand that week; and there were numerous meetings
between Soames and Gianapolis at the corner of Victoria Street, and
numerous whiskies-and-sodas in the Red Lion; for Gianapolis persisted in
his patronage of that establishment, apparently for no other reason than
because it was dangerously near to Scotland Yard, and an occasional house
of call for members of the Criminal Investigation Department.</p>
<p>Thus did Mr. Soames commence his career of duplicity at the flat of Henry
Leroux; and for some twelve months before the events which so dramatically
interfered with the delightful scheme, he drew his double salary and
performed his perfidious work with great efficiency and contentment. Mrs.
Leroux paid four other visits to Paris during that time, and always
returned in much better spirits, although pale and somewhat haggard
looking. It fell to the lot of Soames always to meet her at Charing Cross;
but never once, by look or by word, did she proffer, or invite, the
slightest exchange of confidence. She apathetically accepted his aid in
conducting this intrigue as she would have accepted his aid in putting on
her opera-cloak.</p>
<p>The curious Soames had read right through the telephone directory from A
to Z in quest of East 18642—only to learn that no such number was
published. His ingenuity not being great, he could think of no means to
learn the address of the mysterious Mr. King. So keenly had he been
impressed with the omniscience of that shadowy being who knew all his
past, that he feared to inquire of the Eastern Exchange. His banking
account was growing handsomely, and, above all things, he dreaded to kill
the goose that laid the golden eggs.</p>
<p>Then came the night which shattered all. Having rung up East 18642 and
made an appointment with Gianapolis in regard to some letters for Mrs.
Leroux, he had been surprised, on reaching the corner of Victoria Street,
to find that Gianapolis was not there! He glanced up at the face of Big
Ben. Yes—for the first time during their business acquaintance, Mr.
Gianapolis was late!</p>
<p>For close upon twenty minutes, Soames waited, walking slowly up and down.
When, at last, coming from the direction of Westminster, he saw the
familiar spruce figure.</p>
<p>Eagerly he hurried forward to meet the Greek; but Gianapolis—to the
horror and amazement of Soames—affected not to know him! He stepped
aside to avoid the stupefied butler, and passed. But, in passing, he
hissed these words at Soames:—</p>
<p>“Follow to Victoria Street Post Office! Pretend to post letters at next
box to me and put them in my hand!”</p>
<p>He was gone!</p>
<p>Soames, dazed at this new state of affairs, followed him at a discreet
distance. Gianapolis ran up the Post Office steps briskly, and Soames,
immediately afterwards, ascended also—furtively. Gianapolis was
taking out a number of letters from his pocket.</p>
<p>Soames walked across to the “Country” box on his right, and affected to
scrutinize the addresses on the envelopes of Mrs. Leroux's correspondence.</p>
<p>Gianapolis, on the pretense of posting a country letter, reached out and
snatched the correspondence from Soames' hand. The gaze of his left eye
crookedly sought the face of the butler.</p>
<p>“Go home!” whispered Gianapolis; “be cautious!”</p>
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