<p><SPAN name="chap13"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER XIII <br/> ENTER, A CIGARETTE </h3>
<p>Mr. Joseph Almer, proprietor of the
Hotel Splendide, on Waterport Street,
was absorbed, heart and soul, in a curious task.
He was emptying the powder from two-grain
quinine capsules on to a sheet of white letter
paper on his desk.</p>
<p>It was noon of Wednesday, the day following
the arrival of Captain Woodhouse. Almer was
alone in the hotel's reception room and office
behind the dingy glass partially enclosing his
desk. His alpaca-covered shoulders were close
to his ears; and his bald head, with its stripes
of plastered hair running like thick lines of
latitude on a polished globe, was held far
forward so as to bring his eyes on the work in
hand. Like some plump magpie he appeared,
turning over bits of china in a treasure hole.</p>
<p>A round box of the gelatine cocoons lay at his
left hand; it had just been delivered by an
Arab boy, quick to pick up the street commission
for a tuppence. Very methodically Almer
picked the capsules from the box one by one,
opened them, and spilled the quinine in a little
heap under his nose. He grunted peevishly
when the sixth shell had been emptied. The
seventh capsule brought an eager whistle to
his lips. When he had jerked the concentric
halves apart, very little powder fell out.
Instead, the thin, folded edges of a pellet of rice
paper protruded from one of the containers.
This Almer had extracted in an instant. He
spread it against the black back of a ledger and
read the very fine script written thereon. This
was the message:</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>"Danger. An informer from Alexandria has
denounced our two friends to Crandall. You
must warn; I can not."</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>The spy's heart was suddenly drained, and
the wisp of paper in his hand trembled so that
it scattered the quinine about in a thin cloud.
Once more he read the note, then held a match
to it and scuffed its feathery ash with his feet
into the rug beneath his stool. The fortitude
which had held Joseph Almer to the Rock in
the never-failing hope that some day would
bring him the opportunity to do a great service
for the fatherland came near crumbling that
minute. He groaned.</p>
<p>"Our friends," he whispered, "Woodhouse
and Louisa—trapped!"</p>
<p>The warning in the note left nothing open to
ambiguity for Almer; there were but four of
them—"friends" under the Wilhelmstrasse
fellowship of danger—there in Gibraltar:
Louisa, the man who passed as Woodhouse,
and whose hand was to execute the great coup
when the right moment came, himself, and that
other one whose place was in Government
House itself. From this latter the note of
warning had come. How desperate the necessity
for it Almer could guess when he took into
reckoning the dangers that beset any attempt
at communication on the writer's part. So
narrow the margin of safety for this "friend"
that he must look at each setting sun as being
reasonably the last for him.</p>
<p>Almer did not attempt to go behind the note
and guess who was the informer that had
lodged information with the governor-general.
He had forgotten, in fact, the incident of the
night before, when the blustering Capper called
the newly arrived Woodhouse by name. The
flash of suspicion that attached responsibility
to the American girl named Gerson was
dissipated as quickly as it came; she had arrived
by motor from Paris, not on the boat from
Alexandria. His was now the imperative duty
to carry warning to the two suspected, not to
waste time in idle speculation as to the identity
of the betrayer. There was but one ray of
hope in this sudden pall of gloom, and that
Almer grasped eagerly. He knew the
character of General Crandall—the phlegmatic
conservatism of the man, which would not easily
be jarred out of an accustomed line of thought
and action. The general would be slow to leap
at an accusation brought against one wearing
the stripes of service; and, though he might
reasonably attempt to test Captain Woodhouse,
one such as Woodhouse, chosen by the Wilhelmstrasse
to accomplish so great a mission, would
surely have the wit to parry suspicion.</p>
<p>Yes, he must be put on his guard. As for
Louisa—well, it would be too bad if the girl
should have to put her back against a wall;
but she could be spared; she was not essential.
After he had succeeded in getting word of his
danger to Woodhouse, Almer would consider
saving Louisa from a firing squad. The nimble
mind of Herr Almer shook itself free from the
incubus of dread and leaped to the exigency of
the moment. Calling his head waiter to keep
warm the chair behind the desk, Almer retired
to his room, and there was exceedingly busy
for half an hour.</p>
<p>The hour of parade during war time on Gibraltar
was one o'clock. At that time, six days
a week, the half of the garrison not actually in
fighting position behind the great guns of the
defense marched to the parade grounds down
by the race track and there went through the
grilling regimen that meant perfection and
the maintenance of a hair-trigger state of
efficiency. Down from the rocky eminences where
the barracks stood, marched this day block after
block of olive-drab fighting units—artillerymen
for the most part, equipped with the rifle and
pack of infantrymen. No blare of brass music
gave the measure to their step; bandsmen in
this time of reality paced two by two, stretchers
carried between them. All the curl and snap
of silken banners that made the parade a
moving spectacle in ordinary times was absent;
flags do not figure in the grim modern business
of warfare. Just those solid blocks of men
trained to kill, sweeping down on to the level
grounds and massing, rank on rank, for
inspection and the trip-hammer pound-pound-pound
of evolutions to follow. Silent integers
of power, flexing their muscles for the supreme
test that any morning's sun might bring.</p>
<p>Mr. Henry J. Sherman stood with his wife,
Kitty and Willy Kimball—Kimball had developed
a surprising interest in one of these
home folks, at least—under the shade of the
row of plane trees fringing the parade grounds.
They tried to persuade themselves that they
were seeing something worth while. This
pleasing fiction wore thin with Mr. Sherman
before fifteen minutes had passed.</p>
<p>"Shucks, mother! The boys at the national-guard
encampment down to Galesburg fair last
year made a better showing than this." He
pursed out his lips and regarded a passing
battalion with a critical eye.</p>
<p>"Looked more like soldiers, anyway," mother
admitted. "Those floppy, broad-brimmed hats
our boys wear make them look more—more
romantic, I'd say."</p>
<p>"But, my dear Mrs. Sherman"—Willy Kimball
flicked his handkerchief from his cuff and
fluttered it across his coat sleeve, where dust
had fallen—"the guards back in the States are
play soldiers, you know; these chaps, here—well,
they are the real thing. They don't dress
up like picture-book soldiers and show off——"</p>
<p>"Play soldiers—huh!" Henry J. had fire in
his eye, and the pearl buttons on his white linen
waistcoat creaked with the swelling of a
patriot's pride. "You've been a long time from
home, Willy. Perhaps you've forgotten that
your own father was at Corinth. Guess you've
overlooked that soldiers' monument in Courthouse
Square back in little old Kewanee. They
were 'play soldiers,' eh?—those boys who
marched away with your dad in sixty-one.
Gimme a regiment of those old boys in blue, and
they could lick this whole bunch of——"</p>
<p>"Father!" Kitty had flipped her hand over
her parent's mouth, her eyes round with real
fear. "You'll get arrested again, talking that
way here where everybody can hear you.
Remember what that hotel man said last night
about careless remarks about military things
on the Rock? Be good, father."</p>
<p>"There, there!" Sherman removed the monitory
hand and patted it reassuringly. "I forgot.
But when I get aboard the <i>Saxonia</i> and
well out to sea, I'm going to just bust
information about what I think of things in general
over here in this Europe place—their Bottycelly
pictures and their broken-down churches
and—and—— Why, bless my soul! The little
store buyer and that Iowa girl who's married
to the governor here!"</p>
<p>The patriot stopped short in his review of the
Continent's delinquencies to wave his hat at
Lady Crandall and Jane Gerson, who were
trundling down under the avenue of planes in
a smart dog-cart. Lady Crandall answered his
hail with a flourish of her whip, turned her
horse off the road, and brought her conveyance
to a stop by the group of exiles. Hearty
greetings passed around. The governor's wife
showed her unaffected pleasure at the meeting.</p>
<p>"I thought you wouldn't miss the parade,"
she called down from her high seat. "Only
thing that moves on the Rock—these daily
reviews. Brought Miss Gerson down here so
when she gets back to New York she can say
she's seen the defenders of Gibraltar, if not in
action, at least doing their hard training for
it."</p>
<p>"Well, I don't mind tellin' you," Sherman
began defiantly, "I think the national guard of
Illynoy can run circles around these Englishmen
when it comes to puttin' up a show. Now,
Kitty, don't you try to drive a plug in your
dad's sentiments again; Mrs. Crandall's all
right—one of us." A shocked look from his
daughter. "Oh, there I go again, forgettin'.
Lady Crandall, I mean. Excuse me, ma'am."</p>
<p>"Don't you dare apologize," the governor's
wife playfully threatened Mr. Sherman with
her whip. "I love the sound of good,
old-fashioned 'Missis.' Just imagine—married five
years, and nobody has called me 'Mrs. Crandall'
until you did just now. 'Wedded, But Not a
Missis'; wouldn't that be a perfectly gorgeous
title for a Laura Jean novel? Miss Gerson, let's
hop out and join these home folks; they're my
kind."</p>
<p>The burst of laughter that greeted Lady
Crandall's sally was not over before she had
leaped nimbly from her high perch, Henry
J. gallantly assisting. Jane followed, and the
coachman from his little bob seat in the back
drove the dog-cart over the road to wait his
mistress' pleasure. The scattered blocks of
olive-gray on the field had coalesced into a solid
regiment now, and the long double rank of
men was sweeping forward like the cutting arm
of a giant mower. The party of Americans
joined the sparse crowd of spectators at the
edge of the field, the better to see. Jane
Gerson found herself chatting with Willy Kimball
and Kitty Sherman a little apart from the
others. A light touch fell on her elbow. She
turned to find Almer, the hotel keeper, smiling
deferentially.</p>
<p>"Pardon—a thousand pardons for the intrusion,
lady. I am Almer, of the Hotel Splendide."</p>
<p>"You haven't remembered something more I
owe you," Jane challenged bruskly.</p>
<p>"Oh, no, lady!" Almer spread out his hands.
"I happened to see you here watching the
parade, and I remembered a trivial duty I have
which, if I may be so bold as to ask, you may
discharge much more quickly than I—if you
will."</p>
<p>"I discharge a duty—for you?" The girl
did not conceal her puzzlement. Almer's
hand fumbled in a pocket of his flapping alpaca
coat and produced a plain silver cigarette case,
unmonogrammed. She looked at it wonderingly.</p>
<p>"Captain Woodhouse—you met him at my
hotel last night, lady. He left this lying on his
dresser when he quit his room to go to barracks
to-day. For me it is difficult to send a
messenger with it to the barracks—war time,
lady—many restrictions inside the lines. I
came here hoping perhaps to see the captain
after the parade. But you——"</p>
<p>"You wish me to give this to Captain Woodhouse?"
Jane finished, a flicker of annoyance
crossing her face. "Why me?"</p>
<p>"You are at Government House, lady. Captain
Woodhouse comes to tea—all newcomers
to the garrison do that. If you would be so
good——"</p>
<p>Jane took the cigarette case from Almer's
outstretched hand. Lady Crandall had told her
the captain would be in for tea that afternoon.
It was a small matter, this accommodation, as
long as Almer did not insinuate—as he had not
done—any impertinence; imply any over eagerness
on her part to perform so minor a service
for the officer. Almer bowed his thanks and
lost himself in the crowd. Jane turned again
to where Kitty and Kimball were chatting.</p>
<p>"A dun for extra service the landlord forgot
last night, I'll wager," the youth greeted her.</p>
<p>"Oh, no, just a little present," Jane laughed
back at him, holding up the silver case. "With
Almer's compliments to Captain Woodhouse,
who forgot it when he gave up his room to-day.
I've promised to turn it over to the captain and
save the hotel man a lot of trouble and red tape
getting a messenger through to the captain's
quarters."</p>
<p>"By Jove!" Kimball's tired eyes lighted up
with a quick flash of smoker's yearning. "A
life-saver! Came away from my room without
my pet Egyptians—Mr. Sherman yelling at me
to hurry or we'd miss this slow show and all
that. I'm going to play the panhandler and beg
one of your captain friend's smokes. He must
be a good sort or you wouldn't be doing little
favors for him, Miss Gerson. Come, now; in
your capacity as temporary executrix will you
invest one of the captain's cigarettes in a
demand of real charity?"</p>
<p>Keen desire was scarcely veiled under Kimball's
fiction of light patter. Smilingly the girl
extended the case to him.</p>
<p>"Just to make it businesslike, the executrix
demands your note for—um—sixty days, say.
'For one cigarette received, I promise to
pay——'"</p>
<p>"Given!" He pulled a gold pencil from his
pocket and made a pretense of writing the form
on his cuff. Then he lit his borrowed cigarette
and inhaled it gratefully.</p>
<p>"Your captain friend's straight from Egypt;
I don't have to be told that," Willy Kimball
murmured, in polite ecstasy. "At Shepard's,
in Cairo, you'll get such a cigarette as this,
and nowhere else in a barren world. The
breath of the acanthus blossom—if it really
has a breath—never heard."</p>
<p>"Back in Kewanee the Ladies' Aid Society
will have you arrested," Kitty put in
mischievously. "They're terribly wrought up over
cigarettes—for minors."</p>
<p>Kimball cast her a glance of deep reproach.
As he lifted the cigarette to his lips for a
second puff, Jane's eyes mechanically followed the
movement. Something caught and held them,
wonder-filled.</p>
<p>On the side of the white paper cylinder
nearest her a curious brown streak appeared—by
the merest freak of chance her glance fell on it.
As she looked, the thin stain grew darker nearest
the fresh ash. The farther end of the faint
tracing moved—yes, moved, like a threadworm
groping its way along a stick.</p>
<p>"Now what are they all doing out there?"
Kitty Sherman was asking. "All those men
running top speed with their guns carried up
so high."</p>
<p>"Bayonet charge," Kimball answered. "Nothing
like the real thing, of course."</p>
<p>Jane Gerson was watching the twisting and
writhing of that filament of brown against the
white. An invisible hand was writing in
brown ink on the side of the cigarette—writing
backward and away from the burning tip.
It lengthened by seconds—"and Louisa to
Crandall."</p>
<p>So the letters of silver nitrate formed
themselves under her eyes. Kimball took the
cigarette from his lips and held it by his side for
a minute. He and Kitty were busy with each
other's company for the time, ignoring Jane.
She burned with curiosity and with excitement
mounting like the fire of wine to her brain.
Would he never put that cigarette to his lips
again, so she could follow the invisible pen!
So fleeting, so evanescent that worm track
on the paper, wrought by fire and by
fire to be consumed. A mystery vanishing
even as it was aborning! After ages, the
unconscious Kimball set the cigarette again in
his lips.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>"—nformer has denounced you and Louisa-t-<br/>
—play your game and he will be slow to——"<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Again the cigarette came away in Kimball's
hand. Acting on impulse she did not stop to
question, Jane struck it from the young man's
outstretched hand and set her foot on it as it
fell in the dust.</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm clumsy!" She fell lightly against
Kimball's shoulder and caught herself in
well-simulated confusion. "Standing tiptoe to see
what that man on a horse is going to do—lost
my balance. And—and your precious
cigarette—gone!"</p>
<p>The anguish in Jane Gerson's voice was not
play. It was real—terribly real.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
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