<SPAN name="costume"></SPAN>
<h3> A COSTUME PIECE </h3>
<p>London was just then talking of one whose name is already a name and
nothing more. Reuben Rosenthall had made his millions on the diamond
fields of South Africa, and had come home to enjoy them according to
his lights; how he went to work will scarcely be forgotten by any
reader of the halfpenny evening papers, which revelled in endless
anecdotes of his original indigence and present prodigality, varied
with interesting particulars of the extraordinary establishment which
the millionaire set up in St. John's Wood. Here he kept a retinue of
Kaffirs, who were literally his slaves; and hence he would sally, with
enormous diamonds in his shirt and on his finger, in the convoy of a
prize-fighter of heinous repute, who was not, however, by any means the
worst element in the Rosenthall melange. So said common gossip; but
the fact was sufficiently established by the interference of the police
on at least one occasion, followed by certain magisterial proceedings
which were reported with justifiable gusto and huge headlines in the
newspapers aforesaid.</p>
<p>And this was all one knew of Reuben Rosenthall up to the time when the
Old Bohemian Club, having fallen on evil days, found it worth its while
to organize a great dinner in honor of so wealthy an exponent of the
club's principles. I was not at the banquet myself, but a member took
Raffles, who told me all about it that very night.</p>
<p>"Most extraordinary show I ever went to in my life," said he. "As for
the man himself—well, I was prepared for something grotesque, but the
fellow fairly took my breath away. To begin with, he's the most
astounding brute to look at, well over six feet, with a chest like a
barrel, and a great hook-nose, and the reddest hair and whiskers you
ever saw. Drank like a fire-engine, but only got drunk enough to make
us a speech that I wouldn't have missed for ten pounds. I'm only sorry
you weren't there, too, Bunny, old chap."</p>
<p>I began to be sorry myself, for Raffles was anything but an excitable
person, and never had I seen him so excited before. Had he been
following Rosenthall's example? His coming to my rooms at midnight,
merely to tell me about his dinner, was in itself enough to excuse a
suspicion which was certainly at variance with my knowledge of A. J.
Raffles.</p>
<p>"What did he say?" I inquired mechanically, divining some subtler
explanation of this visit, and wondering what on earth it could be.</p>
<p>"Say?" cried Raffles. "What did he not say! He boasted of his rise,
he bragged of his riches, and he blackguarded society for taking him up
for his money and dropping him out of sheer pique and jealousy because
he had so much. He mentioned names, too, with the most charming
freedom, and swore he was as good a man as the Old Country had to
show—PACE the Old Bohemians. To prove it he pointed to a great diamond
in the middle of his shirt-front with a little finger loaded with
another just like it: which of our bloated princes could show a pair
like that? As a matter of fact, they seemed quite wonderful stones,
with a curious purple gleam to them that must mean a pot of money. But
old Rosenthall swore he wouldn't take fifty thousand pounds for the
two, and wanted to know where the other man was who went about with
twenty-five thousand in his shirt-front and another twenty-five on his
little finger. He didn't exist. If he did, he wouldn't have the pluck
to wear them. But he had—he'd tell us why. And before you could say
Jack Robinson he had whipped out a whacking great revolver!"</p>
<p>"Not at the table?"</p>
<p>"At the table! In the middle of his speech! But it was nothing to
what he wanted to do. He actually wanted us to let him write his name
in bullets on the opposite wall, to show us why he wasn't afraid to go
about in all his diamonds! That brute Purvis, the prize-fighter, who
is his paid bully, had to bully his master before he could be persuaded
out of it. There was quite a panic for the moment; one fellow was
saying his prayers under the table, and the waiters bolted to a man."</p>
<p>"What a grotesque scene!"</p>
<p>"Grotesque enough, but I rather wish they had let him go the whole hog
and blaze away. He was as keen as knives to show us how he could take
care of his purple diamonds; and, do you know, Bunny, <i>I</i> was as keen
as knives to see."</p>
<p>And Raffles leaned towards me with a sly, slow smile that made the
hidden meaning of his visit only too plain to me at last.</p>
<p>"So you think of having a try for his diamonds yourself?"</p>
<p>He shrugged his shoulders.</p>
<p>"It is horribly obvious, I admit. But—yes, I have set my heart upon
them! To be quite frank, I have had them on my conscience for some
time; one couldn't hear so much of the man, and his prize-fighter, and
his diamonds, without feeling it a kind of duty to have a go for them;
but when it comes to brandishing a revolver and practically challenging
the world, the thing becomes inevitable. It is simply thrust upon one.
I was fated to hear that challenge, Bunny, and I, for one, must take it
up. I was only sorry I couldn't get on my hind legs and say so then
and there."</p>
<p>"Well," I said, "I don't see the necessity as things are with us; but,
of course, I'm your man."</p>
<p>My tone may have been half-hearted. I did my best to make it
otherwise. But it was barely a month since our Bond Street exploit,
and we certainly could have afforded to behave ourselves for some time
to come. We had been getting along so nicely: by his advice I had
scribbled a thing or two; inspired by Raffles, I had even done an
article on our own jewel robbery; and for the moment I was quite
satisfied with this sort of adventure. I thought we ought to know when
we were well off, and could see no point in our running fresh risks
before we were obliged. On the other hand, I was anxious not to show
the least disposition to break the pledge that I had given a month ago.
But it was not on my manifest disinclination that Raffles fastened.</p>
<p>"Necessity, my dear Bunny? Does the writer only write when the wolf is
at the door? Does the painter paint for bread alone? Must you and I
be DRIVEN to crime like Tom of Bow and Dick of Whitechapel? You pain
me, my dear chap; you needn't laugh, because you do. Art for art's
sake is a vile catchword, but I confess it appeals to me. In this case
my motives are absolutely pure, for I doubt if we shall ever be able to
dispose of such peculiar stones. But if I don't have a try for
them—after to-night—I shall never be able to hold up my head again."</p>
<p>His eye twinkled, but it glittered, too.</p>
<p>"We shall have our work cut out," was all I said.</p>
<p>"And do you suppose I should be keen on it if we hadn't?" cried
Raffles. "My dear fellow, I would rob St. Paul's Cathedral if I could,
but I could no more scoop a till when the shopwalker wasn't looking
than I could bag the apples out of an old woman's basket. Even that
little business last month was a sordid affair, but it was necessary,
and I think its strategy redeemed it to some extent. Now there's some
credit, and more sport, in going where they boast they're on their
guard against you. The Bank of England, for example, is the ideal
crib; but that would need half a dozen of us with years to give to the
job; and meanwhile Reuben Rosenthall is high enough game for you and
me. We know he's armed. We know how Billy Purvis can fight. It'll be
no soft thing, I grant you. But what of that, my good Bunny—what of
that? A man's reach must exceed his grasp, dear boy, or what the
dickens is a heaven for?"</p>
<p>"I would rather we didn't exceed ours just yet," I answered laughing,
for his spirit was irresistible, and the plan was growing upon me,
despite my qualms.</p>
<p>"Trust me for that," was his reply; "I'll see you through. After all I
expect to find that the difficulties are nearly all on the surface.
These fellows both drink like the devil, and that should simplify
matters considerably. But we shall see, and we must take our time.
There will probably turn out to be a dozen different ways in which the
thing might be done, and we shall have to choose between them. It will
mean watching the house for at least a week in any case; it may mean
lots of other things that will take much longer; but give me a week and
I will tell you more. That's to say, if you're really on?"</p>
<p>"Of course I am," I replied indignantly. "But why should I give you a
week? Why shouldn't we watch the house together?"</p>
<p>"Because two eyes are as good as four and take up less room. Never
hunt in couples unless you're obliged. But don't you look offended,
Bunny; there'll be plenty for you to do when the time comes, that I
promise you. You shall have your share of the fun, never fear, and a
purple diamond all to yourself—if we're lucky."</p>
<p>On the whole, however, this conversation left me less than lukewarm,
and I still remember the depression which came upon me when Raffles was
gone. I saw the folly of the enterprise to which I had committed
myself—the sheer, gratuitous, unnecessary folly of it. And the
paradoxes in which Raffles revelled, and the frivolous casuistry which
was nevertheless half sincere, and which his mere personality rendered
wholly plausible at the moment of utterance, appealed very little to me
when recalled in cold blood. I admired the spirit of pure mischief in
which he seemed prepared to risk his liberty and his life, but I did
not find it an infectious spirit on calm reflection. Yet the thought
of withdrawal was not to be entertained for a moment. On the contrary,
I was impatient of the delay ordained by Raffles; and, perhaps, no
small part of my secret disaffection came of his galling determination
to do without me until the last moment.</p>
<p>It made it no better that this was characteristic of the man and of his
attitude towards me. For a month we had been, I suppose, the thickest
thieves in all London, and yet our intimacy was curiously incomplete.
With all his charming frankness, there was in Raffles a vein of
capricious reserve which was perceptible enough to be very irritating.
He had the instinctive secretiveness of the inveterate criminal. He
would make mysteries of matters of common concern; for example, I never
knew how or where he disposed of the Bond Street jewels, on the
proceeds of which we were both still leading the outward lives of
hundreds of other young fellows about town. He was consistently
mysterious about that and other details, of which it seemed to me that
I had already earned the right to know everything. I could not but
remember how he had led me into my first felony, by means of a trick,
while yet uncertain whether he could trust me or not.</p>
<p>That I could no longer afford to resent, but I did resent his want of
confidence in me now. I said nothing about it, but it rankled every
day, and never more than in the week that succeeded the Rosenthall
dinner. When I met Raffles at the club he would tell me nothing; when
I went to his rooms he was out, or pretended to be.</p>
<p>One day he told me he was getting on well, but slowly; it was a more
ticklish game than he had thought; but when I began to ask questions he
would say no more. Then and there, in my annoyance, I took my own
decision. Since he would tell me nothing of the result of his vigils,
I determined to keep one on my own account, and that very evening found
my way to the millionaire's front gates.</p>
<p>The house he was occupying is, I believe, quite the largest in the St.
John's Wood district. It stands in the angle formed by two broad
thoroughfares, neither of which, as it happens, is a 'bus route, and I
doubt if many quieter spots exist within the four-mile radius. Quiet
also was the great square house, in its garden of grass-plots and
shrubs; the lights were low, the millionaire and his friends obviously
spending their evening elsewhere. The garden walls were only a few
feet high. In one there was a side door opening into a glass passage;
in the other two five-barred, grained-and-varnished gates, one at
either end of the little semi-circular drive, and both wide open. So
still was the place that I had a great mind to walk boldly in and learn
something of the premises; in fact, I was on the point of doing so,
when I heard a quick, shuffling step on the pavement behind me. I
turned round and faced the dark scowl and the dirty clenched fists of a
dilapidated tramp.</p>
<p>"You fool!" said he. "You utter idiot!"</p>
<p>"Raffles!"</p>
<p>"That's it," he whispered savagely; "tell all the neighborhood—give me
away at the top of your voice!"</p>
<p>With that he turned his back upon me, and shambled down the road,
shrugging his shoulders and muttering to himself as though I had
refused him alms. A few moments I stood astounded, indignant, at a
loss; then I followed him. His feet trailed, his knees gave, his back
was bowed, his head kept nodding; it was the gait of a man eighty years
of age. Presently he waited for me midway between two lamp-posts. As
I came up he was lighting rank tobacco, in a cutty pipe, with an
evil-smelling match, and the flame showed me the suspicion of a smile.</p>
<p>"You must forgive my heat, Bunny, but it really was very foolish of
you. Here am I trying every dodge—begging at the door one
night—hiding in the shrubs the next—doing every mortal thing but
stand and stare at the house as you went and did. It's a costume piece,
and in you rush in your ordinary clothes. I tell you they're on the
lookout for us night and day. It's the toughest nut I ever tackled!"</p>
<p>"Well," said I, "if you had told me so before I shouldn't have come.
You told me nothing."</p>
<p>He looked hard at me from under the broken brim of a battered billycock.</p>
<p>"You're right," he said at length. "I've been too close. It's become
second nature with me when I've anything on. But here's an end of it,
Bunny, so far as you're concerned. I'm going home now, and I want you
to follow me; but for heaven's sake keep your distance, and don't speak
to me again till I speak to you. There—give me a start." And he was
off again, a decrepit vagabond, with his hands in his pockets, his
elbows squared, and frayed coat-tails swinging raggedly from side to
side.</p>
<p>I followed him to the Finchley Road. There he took an Atlas omnibus,
and I sat some rows behind him on the top, but not far enough to escape
the pest of his vile tobacco. That he could carry his character-sketch
to such a pitch—he who would only smoke one brand of cigarette! It
was the last, least touch of the insatiable artist, and it charmed away
what mortification there still remained in me. Once more I felt the
fascination of a comrade who was forever dazzling one with a fresh and
unsuspected facet of his character.</p>
<p>As we neared Piccadilly I wondered what he would do. Surely he was not
going into the Albany like that? No, he took another omnibus to Sloane
Street, I sitting behind him as before. At Sloane Street we changed
again, and were presently in the long lean artery of the King's Road.
I was now all agog to know our destination, nor was I kept many more
minutes in doubt. Raffles got down. I followed. He crossed the road
and disappeared up a dark turning. I pressed after him, and was in
time to see his coat-tails as he plunged into a still darker flagged
alley to the right. He was holding himself up and stepping out like a
young man once more; also, in some subtle way, he already looked less
disreputable. But I alone was there to see him, the alley was
absolutely deserted, and desperately dark. At the further end he
opened a door with a latch-key, and it was darker yet within.</p>
<p>Instinctively I drew back and heard him chuckle. We could no longer see
each other.</p>
<p>"All right, Bunny! There's no hanky-panky this time. These are
studios, my friend, and I'm one of the lawful tenants."</p>
<p>Indeed, in another minute we were in a lofty room with skylight,
easels, dressing-cupboard, platform, and every other adjunct save the
signs of actual labor. The first thing I saw, as Raffles lit the gas,
was its reflection in his silk hat on the pegs beside the rest of his
normal garments.</p>
<p>"Looking for the works of art?" continued Raffles, lighting a cigarette
and beginning to divest himself of his rags. "I'm afraid you won't
find any, but there's the canvas I'm always going to make a start upon.
I tell them I'm looking high and low for my ideal model. I have the
stove lit on principle twice a week, and look in and leave a newspaper
and a smell of Sullivans—how good they are after shag! Meanwhile I
pay my rent and am a good tenant in every way; and it's a very useful
little pied-a-terre—there's no saying how useful it might be at a
pinch. As it is, the billy-cock comes in and the topper goes out, and
nobody takes the slightest notice of either; at this time of night the
chances are that there's not a soul in the building except ourselves."</p>
<p>"You never told me you went in for disguises," said I, watching him as
he cleansed the grime from his face and hands.</p>
<p>"No, Bunny, I've treated you very shabbily all round. There was really
no reason why I shouldn't have shown you this place a month ago, and
yet there was no point in my doing so, and circumstances are just
conceivable in which it would have suited us both for you to be in
genuine ignorance of my whereabouts. I have something to sleep on, as
you perceive, in case of need, and, of course, my name is not Raffles
in the King's Road. So you will see that one might bolt further and
fare worse."</p>
<p>"Meanwhile you use the place as a dressing-room?"</p>
<p>"It is my private pavilion," said Raffles. "Disguises? In some cases
they're half the battle, and it's always pleasant to feel that, if the
worst comes to the worst, you needn't necessarily be convicted under
your own name. Then they're indispensable in dealing with the fences.
I drive all my bargains in the tongue and raiment of Shoreditch. If I
didn't there'd be the very devil to pay in blackmail. Now, this
cupboard's full of all sorts of toggery. I tell the woman who cleans
the room that it's for my models when I find 'em. By the way, I only
hope I've got something that'll fit you, for you'll want a rig for
to-morrow night."</p>
<p>"To-morrow night!" I exclaimed. "Why, what do you mean to do?"</p>
<p>"The trick," said Raffles. "I intended writing to you as soon as I got
back to my rooms, to ask you to look me up to-morrow afternoon; then I
was going to unfold my plan of campaign, and take you straight into
action then and there. There's nothing like putting the nervous
players in first; it's the sitting with their pads on that upsets their
applecart; that was another of my reasons for being so confoundedly
close. You must try to forgive me. I couldn't help remembering how
well you played up last trip, without any time to weaken on it
beforehand. All I want is for you to be as cool and smart to-morrow
night as you were then; though, by Jove, there's no comparison between
the two cases!"</p>
<p>"I thought you would find it so."</p>
<p>"You were right. I have. Mind you, I don't say this will be the
tougher job all round; we shall probably get in without any difficulty
at all; it's the getting out again that may flummox us. That's the
worst of an irregular household!" cried Raffles, with quite a burst of
virtuous indignation. "I assure you, Bunny, I spent the whole of
Monday night in the shrubbery of the garden next door, looking over the
wall, and, if you'll believe me, somebody was about all night long! I
don't mean the Kaffirs. I don't believe they ever get to bed at
all—poor devils! No, I mean Rosenthall himself, and that pasty-faced
beast Purvis. They were up and drinking from midnight, when they came
in, to broad daylight, when I cleared out. Even then I left them sober
enough to slang each other. By the way, they very nearly came to blows
in the garden, within a few yards of me, and I heard something that
might come in useful and make Rosenthall shoot crooked at a critical
moment. You know what an I. D. B. is?"</p>
<p>"Illicit Diamond Buyer?"</p>
<p>"Exactly. Well, it seems that Rosenthall was one. He must have let it
out to Purvis in his cups. Anyhow, I heard Purvis taunting him with it,
and threatening him with the breakwater at Capetown; and I begin to
think our friends are friend and foe. But about to-morrow night:
there's nothing subtle in my plan. It's simply to get in while these
fellows are out on the loose, and to lie low till they come back, and
longer. If possible, we must doctor the whiskey. That would simplify
the whole thing, though it's not a very sporting game to play; still,
we must remember Rosenthall's revolver; we don't want him to sign his
name on <i>us</i>. With all those Kaffirs about, however, it's ten to one on
the whiskey, and a hundred to one against us if we go looking for it.
A brush with the heathen would spoil everything, if it did no more.
Besides, there are the ladies—"</p>
<p>"The deuce there are!"</p>
<p>"Ladies with an <i>I</i>, and the very voices for raising Cain. I fear, I
fear the clamor! It would be fatal to us. Au contraire, if we can
manage to stow ourselves away unbeknownst, half the battle will be won.
If Rosenthall turns in drunk, it's a purple diamond apiece. If he sits
up sober, it may be a bullet instead. We will hope not, Bunny; and all
the firing wouldn't be on one side; but it's on the knees of the gods."</p>
<p>And so we left it when we shook hands in Picadilly—not by any means as
much later as I could have wished. Raffles would not ask me to his
rooms that night. He said he made it a rule to have a long night
before playing cricket and—other games. His final word to me was
framed on the same principle.</p>
<p>"Mind, only one drink to-night, Bunny. Two at the outside—as you
value your life—and mine!"</p>
<p>I remember my abject obedience; and the endless, sleepless night it
gave me; and the roofs of the houses opposite standing out at last
against the blue-gray London dawn. I wondered whether I should ever
see another, and was very hard on myself for that little expedition
which I had made on my own wilful account.</p>
<p>It was between eight and nine o'clock in the evening when we took up
our position in the garden adjoining that of Reuben Rosenthall; the
house itself was shut up, thanks to the outrageous libertine next door,
who, by driving away the neighbors, had gone far towards delivering
himself into our hands. Practically secure from surprise on that side,
we could watch our house under cover of a wall just high enough to see
over, while a fair margin of shrubs in either garden afforded us
additional protection. Thus entrenched, we had stood an hour, watching
a pair of lighted bow-windows with vague shadows flitting continually
across the blinds, and listening to the drawing of corks, the clink of
glasses, and a gradual crescendo of coarse voices within. Our luck
seemed to have deserted us: the owner of the purple diamonds was dining
at home and dining at undue length. I thought it was a dinner-party.
Raffles differed; in the end he proved right. Wheels grated in the
drive, a carriage and pair stood at the steps; there was a stampede
from the dining-room, and the loud voices died away, to burst forth
presently from the porch.</p>
<p>Let me make our position perfectly clear. We were over the wall, at
the side of the house, but a few feet from the dining-room windows. On
our right, one angle of the building cut the back lawn in two
diagonally; on our left, another angle just permitted us to see the
jutting steps and the waiting carriage. We saw Rosenthall come
out—saw the glimmer of his diamonds before anything. Then came the
pugilist; then a lady with a head of hair like a bath sponge; then
another, and the party was complete.</p>
<p>Raffles ducked and pulled me down in great excitement.</p>
<p>"The ladies are going with them," he whispered. "This is great!"</p>
<p>"That's better still."</p>
<p>"The Gardenia!" the millionaire had bawled.</p>
<p>"And that's best of all," said Raffles, standing upright as hoofs and
wheels crunched through the gates and rattled off at a fine speed.</p>
<p>"Now what?" I whispered, trembling with excitement.</p>
<p>"They'll be clearing away. Yes, here come their shadows. The
drawing-room windows open on the lawn. Bunny, it's the psychological
moment. Where's that mask?"</p>
<p>I produced it with a hand whose trembling I tried in vain to still, and
could have died for Raffles when he made no comment on what he could
not fail to notice. His own hands were firm and cool as he adjusted my
mask for me, and then his own.</p>
<p>"By Jove, old boy," he whispered cheerily, "you look about the greatest
ruffian I ever saw! These masks alone will down a nigger, if we meet
one. But I'm glad I remembered to tell you not to shave. You'll pass
for Whitechapel if the worst comes to the worst and you don't forget to
talk the lingo. Better sulk like a mule if you're not sure of it, and
leave the dialogue to me; but, please our stars, there will be no need.
Now, are you ready?"</p>
<p>"Quite."</p>
<p>"Got your gag?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Shooter?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Then follow me."</p>
<p>In an instant we were over the wall, in another on the lawn behind the
house. There was no moon. The very stars in their courses had veiled
themselves for our benefit. I crept at my leader's heels to some
French windows opening upon a shallow veranda. He pushed. They
yielded.</p>
<p>"Luck again," he whispered; "nothing BUT luck! Now for a light."</p>
<p>And the light came!</p>
<p>A good score of electric burners glowed red for the fraction of a
second, then rained merciless white beams into our blinded eyes. When
we found our sight four revolvers covered us, and between two of them
the colossal frame of Reuben Rosenthall shook with a wheezy laughter
from head to foot.</p>
<p>"Good-evening, boys," he hiccoughed. "Glad to see ye at last. Shift
foot or finger, you on the left, though, and you're a dead boy. I mean
you, you greaser!" he roared out at Raffles. "I know you. I've been
waitin' for you. I've been <i>watchin'</i> you all this week! Plucky smart
you thought yerself, didn't you? One day beggin', next time shammin'
tight, and next one o' them old pals from Kimberley what never come
when I'm in. But you left the same tracks every day, you buggins, an'
the same tracks every night, all round the blessed premises."</p>
<p>"All right, guv'nor," drawled Raffles; "don't excite. It's a fair cop.
We don't sweat to know 'ow you brung it orf. On'y don't you go for to
shoot, 'cos we 'int awmed, s'help me Gord!"</p>
<p>"Ah, you're a knowin' one," said Rosenthall, fingering his triggers.
"But you've struck a knowin'er."</p>
<p>"Ho, yuss, we know all abaht thet! Set a thief to ketch a thief—ho,
yuss."</p>
<p>My eyes had torn themselves from the round black muzzles, from the
accursed diamonds that had been our snare, the pasty pig-face of the
over-fed pugilist, and the flaming cheeks and hook nose of Rosenthall
himself. I was looking beyond them at the doorway filled with
quivering silk and plush, black faces, white eyeballs, woolly pates.
But a sudden silence recalled my attention to the millionaire. And
only his nose retained its color.</p>
<p>"What d'ye mean?" he whispered with a hoarse oath. "Spit it out, or,
by Christmas, I'll drill you!"</p>
<p>"Whort price thet brikewater?" drawled Raffles coolly.</p>
<p>"Eh?"</p>
<p>Rosenthall's revolvers were describing widening orbits.</p>
<p>"Whort price thet brikewater—old <i>I.D.B.</i>?"</p>
<p>"Where in hell did you get hold o' that?" asked Rosenthall, with a
rattle in his thick neck, meant for mirth.</p>
<p>"You may well arst," says Raffles. "It's all over the plice w'ere <i>I</i>
come from."</p>
<p>"Who can have spread such rot?"</p>
<p>"I dunno," says Raffles; "arst the gen'leman on yer left; p'r'aps 'E
knows."</p>
<p>The gentleman on his left had turned livid with emotion. Guilty
conscience never declared itself in plainer terms. For a moment his
small eyes bulged like currants in the suet of his face; the next, he
had pocketed his pistols on a professional instinct, and was upon us
with his fists.</p>
<p>"Out o' the light—out o' the light!" yelled Rosenthall in a frenzy.</p>
<p>He was too late. No sooner had the burly pugilist obstructed his fire
than Raffles was through the window at a bound; while I, for standing
still and saying nothing, was scientifically felled to the floor.</p>
<br/>
<p>I cannot have been many moments without my senses. When I recovered
them there was a great to-do in the garden, but I had the drawing-room
to myself. I sat up. Rosenthall and Purvis were rushing about
outside, cursing the Kaffirs and nagging at each other.</p>
<p>"Over <i>that</i> wall, I tell yer!"</p>
<p>"I tell you it was this one. Can't you whistle for the police?"</p>
<p>"Police be damned! I've had enough of the blessed police."</p>
<p>"Then we'd better get back and make sure of the other rotter."</p>
<p>"Oh, make sure o' yer skin. That's what you'd better do. Jala, you
black hog, if I catch YOU skulkin'...."</p>
<p>I never heard the threat. I was creeping from the drawing-room on my
hands and knees, my own revolver swinging by its steel ring from my
teeth.</p>
<p>For an instant I thought that the hall also was deserted. I was wrong,
and I crept upon a Kaffir on all fours. Poor devil, I could not bring
myself to deal him a base blow, but I threatened him most hideously
with my revolver, and left the white teeth chattering in his black head
as I took the stairs three at a time. Why I went upstairs in that
decisive fashion, as though it were my only course, I cannot explain.
But garden and ground floor seemed alive with men, and I might have
done worse.</p>
<p>I turned into the first room I came to. It was a bedroom—empty,
though lit up; and never shall I forget how I started as I entered, on
encountering the awful villain that was myself at full length in a
pier-glass! Masked, armed, and ragged, I was indeed fit carrion for a
bullet or the hangman, and to one or the other I made up my mind.
Nevertheless, I hid myself in the wardrobe behind the mirror; and there
I stood shivering and cursing my fate, my folly, and Raffles most of
all—Raffles first and last—for I daresay half an hour. Then the
wardrobe door was flung suddenly open; they had stolen into the room
without a sound; and I was hauled downstairs, an ignominious captive.</p>
<p>Gross scenes followed in the hall; the ladies were now upon the stage,
and at sight of the desperate criminal they screamed with one accord.
In truth I must have given them fair cause, though my mask was now torn
away and hid nothing but my left ear. Rosenthall answered their
shrieks with a roar for silence; the woman with the bath-sponge hair
swore at him shrilly in return; the place became a Babel impossible to
describe. I remember wondering how long it would be before the police
appeared. Purvis and the ladies were for calling them in and giving me
in charge without delay. Rosenthall would not hear of it. He swore
that he would shoot man or woman who left his sight. He had had enough
of the police. He was not going to have them coming there to spoil
sport; he was going to deal with me in his own way. With that he
dragged me from all other hands, flung me against a door, and sent a
bullet crashing through the wood within an inch of my ear.</p>
<p>"You drunken fool! It'll be murder!" shouted Purvis, getting in the
way a second time.</p>
<p>"Wha' do I care? He's armed, isn't he? I shot him in self-defence.
It'll be a warning to others. Will you stand aside, or d'ye want it
yourself?"</p>
<p>"You're drunk," said Purvis, still between us. "I saw you take a neat
tumblerful since you come in, and it's made you drunk as a fool. Pull
yourself together, old man. You ain't a-going to do what you'll be
sorry for."</p>
<p>"Then I won't shoot at him, I'll only shoot roun' an' roun' the beggar.
You're quite right, ole feller. Wouldn't hurt him. Great mishtake.
Roun' an' roun'. There—like that!"</p>
<p>His freckled paw shot up over Purvis's shoulder, mauve lightning came
from his ring, a red flash from his revolver, and shrieks from the
women as the reverberations died away. Some splinters lodged in my
hair.</p>
<p>Next instant the prize-fighter disarmed him; and I was safe from the
devil, but finally doomed to the deep sea. A policeman was in our
midst. He had entered through the drawing-room window; he was an
officer of few words and creditable promptitude. In a twinkling he had
the handcuffs on my wrists, while the pugilist explained the situation,
and his patron reviled the force and its representative with impotent
malignity. A fine watch they kept; a lot of good they did; coming in
when all was over and the whole household might have been murdered in
their sleep. The officer only deigned to notice him as he marched me
off.</p>
<p>"We know all about YOU, sir," said he contemptuously, and he refused
the sovereign Purvis proffered. "You will be seeing me again, sir, at
Marylebone."</p>
<p>"Shall I come now?"</p>
<p>"As you please, sir. I rather think the other gentleman requires you
more, and I don't fancy this young man means to give much trouble."</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm coming quietly," I said.</p>
<p>And I went.</p>
<p>In silence we traversed perhaps a hundred yards. It must have been
midnight. We did not meet a soul. At last I whispered:</p>
<p>"How on earth did you manage it?"</p>
<p>"Purely by luck," said Raffles. "I had the luck to get clear away
through knowing every brick of those back-garden walls, and the double
luck to have these togs with the rest over at Chelsea. The helmet is
one of a collection I made up at Oxford; here it goes over this wall,
and we'd better carry the coat and belt before we meet a real officer.
I got them once for a fancy ball—ostensibly—and thereby hangs a yarn.
I always thought they might come in useful a second time. My chief
crux to-night was getting rid of the hansom that brought me back. I
sent him off to Scotland Yard with ten bob and a special message to
good old Mackenzie. The whole detective department will be at
Rosenthall's in about half an hour. Of course, I speculated on our
gentleman's hatred of the police—another huge slice of luck. If you'd
got away, well and good; if not, I felt he was the man to play with his
mouse as long as possible. Yes, Bunny, it's been more of a costume
piece than I intended, and we've come out of it with a good deal less
credit. But, by Jove, we're jolly lucky to have come out of it at all!"</p>
<br/><br/><br/>
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