<h2><SPAN name="chap35"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXV<br/> BELLAMY’S SUCCESS</h2>
<p>Late that afternoon the hall-porter at the Milan Hotel, the commissionaire, and
the chief maitre d’hotel from the Café, who happened to be in the hall,
together with several others around the place who knew Stephen Laverick by
sight, were treated to an unexpected surprise. A large closed motor-car drove
up to the front entrance and several men descended, among whom was Laverick
himself. He nodded to the hall-porter, whose salute was purely mechanical, and
making his way without hesitation to the interior of the hotel, presented his
receipt at the cashier’s desk and asked for his packet. The clerk looked
up at him in amazement. He did not, for the moment, notice that the two men
standing immediately behind bore the stamp of plain-clothes policemen. He had
only a few minutes ago finished reading the report of Laverick’s
examination before the magistrates and his remand until the morrow, upon the
charge of murder. His knowledge of English law was by no means perfect, but he
was at least aware that Laverick’s appearance outside the purlieus of the
prison was an unusual happening.</p>
<p>“Your packet, sir!” he repeated, in amazement. “Why, this is
Mr. Laverick himself, is it not?”</p>
<p>“Certainly,” was the quiet reply. “I am Stephen
Laverick.”</p>
<p>The clerk called the head cashier, who also stared at Laverick as though he
were a ghost. They whispered together in the background for a moment, and their
faces were a study in perplexity. Of Laverick’s identity, however, there
was no manner of doubt. Besides, the presence of what was obviously a very
ample escort somewhat reassured them. The cashier himself came forward.</p>
<p>“We shall be exceedingly glad, Mr. Laverick,” he said dryly,
“to get rid of your packet. Your instructions were that we should
disregard all orders to hand it over to any person whatsoever, and I may say
that they have been strictly adhered to. We have, however, had two applications
in your name this morning.”</p>
<p>“They were both forgeries,” Laverick declared.</p>
<p>The cashier hesitated. Then he leaned across the broad mahogany counter towards
Laverick. One of the men who appeared to form part of the escort detached
himself from them and approached a few steps nearer.</p>
<p>“This gentleman is your friend, sir?” the cashier asked, glancing
towards him.</p>
<p>“He is my solicitor,” Laverick answered, “and is entirely in
my confidence. If you have anything to tell me, I should like Mr. Bellamy also
to hear.”</p>
<p>Bellamy, who was standing a little in the background, took his place by
Laverick’s side. The cashier, who knew him by sight, bowed.</p>
<p>“Beside these two forged orders, sir,” he said, turning again to
Laverick, “we have had a man who took a room in the hotel leave a small
black bag here, which he insisted upon having deposited in our document safe.
My assistant had accepted it and was actually locking it up when he noticed a
faint sound inside which he could not understand. The bag was opened and found
to contain an infernal machine which would have exploded in a quarter of an
hour.”</p>
<p>Bellamy drew his breath sharply between his teeth.</p>
<p>“We should have thought of that!” he exclaimed softly.
“That’s Kahn’s work!”</p>
<p>“I seem to have given you a great deal of trouble,” Laverick
remarked quietly. “I gather, however, from what you say, that my packet
is still in your possession?”</p>
<p>“It is, sir,” the man assented. “We have two detectives from
Scotland Yard here at the present moment, though, and we had almost decided to
place it in their charge for greater security.”</p>
<p>“It will be well taken care of from now, I promise you,” Laverick
declared.</p>
<p>The cashier and his clerk led the way into the inner office. At their
invitation Laverick and his solicitor followed, and a few yards behind came the
two plain-clothes policemen, Bellamy, and the superintendent. The safe was
opened and the packet placed in Laverick’s hands. He passed it on at once
to Bellamy, and immediately afterwards the doorway behind was thronged with
men, apparently ordinary loiterers around the hotel. They made a slow and
exceedingly cautious exit. Once outside, Bellamy turned to Laverick with
outstretched hand.</p>
<p>“Au revoir and good luck, old chap!” he said heartily. “I
think you’ll find things go your way all right to-morrow morning.”</p>
<p>He departed, forming one of a somewhat singular cavalcade—two of his
friends on either side, two in front, and two behind. It had almost the
appearance of a procession. The whole party stepped into a closed motor-car.
Three or four men were lounging on the pavement and there was some excited
whispering, but no one actually interfered. As soon as they had left the
courtyard, Laverick and his solicitor, with his own guard, re-entered the
motor-car in which they had arrived, and drove back to Bow Street. Very few
words were exchanged during the short journey. His solicitor, however, bade him
good-night cheerfully, and Laverick’s bearing was by no means the bearing
of a man in despair.</p>
<p class="p2">
In Downing Street, within the next half-an-hour, a somewhat remarkable little
gathering took place. The two men chiefly responsible for the destinies of the
nation—the Prime Minister and the Secretary of State for Foreign
Affairs—sat side by side before a small table. Facing them was Bellamy,
and spread out in front were those few pages of foolscap, released from their
envelope a few minutes ago for the first time since the hand of the great
Chancellor himself had pressed down the seal. The Foreign Minister had just
finished a translation for the benefit of his colleague, and the two men were
silent, as men are in the presence of big events.</p>
<p>“Bellamy,” the Prime Minister said slowly, “you are willing
to stake, I presume, your reputation upon the authenticity of this
document?”</p>
<p>“My honor and my life, if you will,” Bellamy answered earnestly.
“That is no copy which you have there. On the contrary, the handwriting
is the handwriting of the Chancellor himself.”</p>
<p>The Prime Minister turned silently towards his colleague. The latter, whose
eyes still seemed glued to those fateful words, looked up.</p>
<p>“All I can say is this,” he remarked impressively, “that
never in my time have I seen written words possessed of so much significance.
One moment, if you please.”</p>
<p>He touched the bell, and his private secretary entered at once from an
adjoining room.</p>
<p>“Anthony,” he said, “telephone to the Great Western Railway
Company at Paddington. Ask for the station master in my name, and see that a
special train is held ready to depart for Windsor in half-an-hour. Tell the
station-master that all ordinary traffic must be held up, but that the
destination of the special is not to be divulged.”</p>
<p>The young man bowed and withdrew.</p>
<p>“The more I consider this matter,” the Foreign Minister went on,
“the more miraculous does the appearance of this document seem. We know
now why the Czar is struggling so frantically to curtail his visit—why he
came, as it were, under protest, and seeks everywhere for an opportunity to
leave before the appointed time. His health is all right. He has had a hint
from Vienna that there has been a leakage. His special mission only reached
Paris this morning. The President is in the country and their audience is not
fixed until to-morrow. Rawson will go over with a copy of these papers and a
dispatch from His Majesty by the nine o’clock train. It is not often that
we have had the chance of such a ‘coup’ as this.”</p>
<p>He drew his chief a few steps away. They whispered together for several
moments. When they returned, the Foreign Minister rang the bell again for his
secretary.</p>
<p>“Anthony,” he said, “Sir James and I will be leaving in a few
minutes for Windsor. Go round yourself to General Hamilton, telephone to
Aldershot for Lord Neville, and call round at the Admiralty Board for Sir John
Harrison. Tell them all to be here at ten o’clock tonight. If I am not
back, they must wait. If either of them have royal commands, you need only
repeat the word ‘Finisterre.’ They will understand.”</p>
<p>The young man once more withdrew. The Prime Minister turned back to the papers.</p>
<p>“It will be worth a great deal,” he remarked, with a grim smile,
“to see His Majesty’s face when he reads this.”</p>
<p>“It would be worth a great deal more,” his fellow statesman
answered dryly, “to be with his August cousin at the interview which will
follow. A month ago, the thought that war might come under our administration
was a continual terror to me. To-day things are entirely different. To-day it
really seems that if war does come, it may be the most glorious happening for
England of this century. You saw the last report from Kiel?”</p>
<p>Sir James nodded.</p>
<p>“There isn’t a battleship or a cruiser worth a snap of the fingers
south of the German Ocean,” his colleague continued earnestly.
“They are cooped up—safe enough, they think—under the shelter
of their fortifications. Hamilton has another idea. Between you and me, Sir
James, so have I. I tell you,” he went on, in a deeper and more
passionate tone, “it’s like the passing of a terrible
nightmare—this. We have had ten years of panic, of nervous fears of a
German invasion, and no one knows more than you and I, Sir James, how much
cause we have had for those fears. It will seem strange if, after all, history
has to write that chapter differently.”</p>
<p>The secretary re-entered and announced the result of his telephone interview
with the superintendent at Paddington. The two great men rose. The Prime
Minister held out his hand to Bellamy.</p>
<p>“Bellamy,” he declared, “you’ve done us one more
important service. There may be work for you within the next few weeks, but
you’ve earned a rest for a day or two, at any rate. There is nothing more
we can do?”</p>
<p>“Nothing except a letter to the Home Secretary, Sir James,” Bellamy
answered. “Remember, sir, that although I have worked hard, the man to
whom we really owe those papers is Stephen Laverick.”</p>
<p>The Prime Minister frowned thoughtfully.</p>
<p>“It’s a difficult situation, Bellamy,” he said. “You
are asking a great deal when you suggest that we should interfere in the
slightest manner with the course of justice. You are absolutely convinced, I
suppose, that this man Laverick had nothing to do with the murder?”</p>
<p>“Absolutely and entirely, sir,” Bellamy replied.</p>
<p>“The murdered man has never been identified by the police,” Sir
James remarked. “Who was he?”</p>
<p>“His name was Rudolph Von Behrling,” Bellamy announced, “and
he was actually the Chancellor’s nephew, also his private secretary. I
have told you the history, sir, of those papers. It was Von Behrling who,
without a doubt, murdered the American journalist and secured them. It was he
who insisted upon coming to London instead of returning with them to Vienna,
which would have been the most obvious course for him to have adopted. He was a
pauper, and desperately in love with a certain lady who has helped me
throughout this matter. He agreed to part with the papers for twenty thousand
pounds, and the lady incidentally promised to elope with him the same night. I
met him by appointment at that little restaurant in the city, paid him the
twenty thousand pounds, and received the false packet which you remember I
brought to you, sir. As a matter of fact, Von Behrling, either by accident or
design, and no man now will ever know which, left me with those papers which I
was supposed to have bought in his possession, and also the money. Within five
minutes he was murdered. Doubtless we shall know sometime by whom, but it was
not by Stephen Laverick. Laverick’s share in the whole thing was nothing
but this—that he found the pocket-book, and that he made use of the notes
in his business for twenty-four hours to save himself from ruin. That was
unjustifiable, of course. He has made atonement. The notes at this minute are
in a safe deposit vault and will be returned intact to the fund from which they
came. I want, also, to impress upon you, Sir James, the fact that Baron de
Streuss offered one hundred thousand pounds for that letter.”</p>
<p>Sir James nodded thoughtfully. He stooped down and scrawled a few lines on half
a sheet of note-paper.</p>
<p>“You must take this to Lord Estcourt at once,” he said, “and
tell him the whole affair, omitting all specific information as to the nature
of the papers. The thing must be arranged, of course.”</p>
<p class="p2">
Half-a-dozen reporters, who had somehow got hold of the fact that the Prime
Minister and his colleague from the Foreign Office were going down to Windsor
on a special mission, followed them, but even they remained altogether in the
dark as to the events which were really transpiring. They knew nothing of the
interview between the Czar and his August host—an interview which in
itself was a chapter in the history of these times. They knew nothing of the
reason of their royal visitor’s decision to prolong his visit instead of
shortening it, or of his autograph letter to the President of the French
Republic, which reached Paris even before the special mission from St.
Petersburg had presented themselves. The one thing which they did know, and
that alone was significant enough, was that the Czar’s Foreign Minister
was cabled for that night to come to his master by special train from St.
Petersburg. At the Austrian and German Embassies, forewarned by a report from
Baron de Streuss, something like consternation reigned. The Russian Ambassador,
heckled to death, took refuge at Windsor under pretence of a command from his
royal master. The happiest man in London was Prince Rosmaran.</p>
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