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<h2> CHAPTER II </h2>
<p>"The necklace was a present from the Queen of England to the Czarina of
Russia," began the Queen's Messenger. "It was to celebrate the occasion of
the Czar's coronation. Our Foreign Office knew that the Russian Ambassador
in Paris was to proceed to Moscow for that ceremony, and I was directed to
go to Paris and turn over the necklace to him. But when I reached Paris I
found he had not expected me for a week later and was taking a few days'
vacation at Nice. His people asked me to leave the necklace with them at
the Embassy, but I had been charged to get a receipt for it from the
Ambassador himself, so I started at once for Nice The fact that Monte
Carlo is not two thousand miles from Nice may have had something to do
with making me carry out my instructions so carefully. Now, how the
Princess Zichy came to find out about the necklace I don't know, but I can
guess. As you have just heard, she was at one time a spy in the service of
the Russian government. And after they dismissed her she kept up her
acquaintance with many of the Russian agents in London. It is probable
that through one of them she learned that the necklace was to be sent to
Moscow, and which one of the Queen's Messengers had been detailed to take
it there. Still, I doubt if even that knowledge would have helped her if
she had not also known something which I supposed no one else in the world
knew but myself and one other man. And, curiously enough, the other man
was a Queen's Messenger too, and a friend of mine. You must know that up
to the time of this robbery I had always concealed my despatches in a
manner peculiarly my own. I got the idea from that play called 'A Scrap of
Paper.' In it a man wants to hide a certain compromising document. He
knows that all his rooms will be secretly searched for it, so he puts it
in a torn envelope and sticks it up where any one can see it on his mantel
shelf. The result is that the woman who is ransacking the house to find it
looks in all the unlikely places, but passes over the scrap of paper that
is just under her nose. Sometimes the papers and packages they give us to
carry about Europe are of very great value, and sometimes they are special
makes of cigarettes, and orders to court dressmakers. Sometimes we know
what we are carrying and sometimes we do not. If it is a large sum of
money or a treaty, they generally tell us. But, as a rule, we have no
knowledge of what the package contains; so, to be on the safe side, we
naturally take just as great care of it as though we knew it held the
terms of an ultimatum or the crown jewels. As a rule, my confreres carry
the official packages in a despatch-box, which is just as obvious as a
lady's jewel bag in the hands of her maid. Every one knows they are
carrying something of value. They put a premium on dishonesty. Well, after
I saw the 'Scrap of Paper' play, I determined to put the government
valuables in the most unlikely place that any one would look for them. So
I used to hide the documents they gave me inside my riding-boots, and
small articles, such as money or jewels, I carried in an old cigar-case.
After I took to using my case for that purpose I bought a new one, exactly
like it, for my cigars. But to avoid mistakes, I had my initials placed on
both sides of the new one, and the moment I touched the case, even in the
dark, I could tell which it was by the raised initials.</p>
<p>"No one knew of this except the Queen's Messenger of whom I spoke. We once
left Paris together on the Orient Express. I was going to Constantinople
and he was to stop off at Vienna. On the journey I told him of my peculiar
way of hiding things and showed him my cigar-case. If I recollect rightly,
on that trip it held the grand cross of St. Michael and St. George, which
the Queen was sending to our Ambassador. The Messenger was very much
entertained at my scheme, and some months later when he met the Princess
he told her about it as an amusing story. Of course, he had no idea she
was a Russian spy. He didn't know anything at all about her, except that
she was a very attractive woman.</p>
<p>"It was indiscreet, but he could not possibly have guessed that she could
ever make any use of what he told her.</p>
<p>"Later, after the robbery, I remembered that I had informed this young
chap of my secret hiding-place, and when I saw him again I questioned him
about it. He was greatly distressed, and said he had never seen the
importance of the secret. He remembered he had told several people of it,
and among others the Princess Zichy. In that way I found out that it was
she who had robbed me, and I know that from the moment I left London she
was following me and that she knew then that the diamonds were concealed
in my cigar-case.</p>
<p>"My train for Nice left Paris at ten in the morning. When I travel at
night I generally tell the <i>chef de gare</i> that I am a Queen's
Messenger, and he gives me a compartment to myself, but in the daytime I
take whatever offers. On this morning I had found an empty compartment,
and I had tipped the guard to keep every one else out, not from any fear
of losing the diamonds, but because I wanted to smoke. He had locked the
door, and as the last bell had rung I supposed I was to travel alone, so I
began to arrange my traps and make myself comfortable. The diamonds in the
cigar-case were in the inside pocket of my waistcoat, and as they made a
bulky package, I took them out, intending to put them in my hand bag. It
is a small satchel like a bookmaker's, or those hand bags that couriers
carry. I wear it slung from a strap across my shoulder, and, no matter
whether I am sitting or walking, it never leaves me.</p>
<p>"I took the cigar-case which held the necklace from my inside pocket and
the case which held the cigars out of the satchel, and while I was
searching through it for a box of matches I laid the two cases beside me
on the seat.</p>
<p>"At that moment the train started, but at the same instant there was a
rattle at the lock of the compartment, and a couple of porters lifted and
shoved a woman through the door, and hurled her rugs and umbrellas in
after her.</p>
<p>"Instinctively I reached for the diamonds. I shoved them quickly into the
satchel and, pushing them far down to the bottom of the bag, snapped the
spring lock. Then I put the cigars in the pocket of my coat, but with the
thought that now that I had a woman as a travelling companion I would
probably not be allowed to enjoy them.</p>
<p>"One of her pieces of luggage had fallen at my feet, and a roll of rugs
had landed at my side. I thought if I hid the fact that the lady was not
welcome, and at once endeavored to be civil, she might permit me to smoke.
So I picked her hand bag off the floor and asked her where I might place
it.</p>
<p>"As I spoke I looked at her for the first time, and saw that she was a
most remarkably handsome woman.</p>
<p>"She smiled charmingly and begged me not to disturb myself. Then she
arranged her own things about her, and, opening her dressing-bag, took out
a gold cigarette case.</p>
<p>"'Do you object to smoke?' she asked.</p>
<p>"I laughed and assured her I had been in great terror lest she might
object to it herself.</p>
<p>"'If you like cigarettes,' she said, 'will you try some of these? They are
rolled especially for my husband in Russia, and they are supposed to be
very good.'</p>
<p>"I thanked her, and took one from her case, and I found it so much better
than my own that I continued to smoke her cigarettes throughout the rest
of the journey. I must say that we got on very well. I judged from the
coronet on her cigarette-case, and from her manner, which was quite as
well bred as that of any woman I ever met, that she was some one of
importance, and though she seemed almost too good looking to be
respectable, I determined that she was some <i>grande dame</i> who was so
assured of her position that she could afford to be unconventional. At
first she read her novel, and then she made some comment on the scenery,
and finally we began to discuss the current politics of the Continent. She
talked of all the cities in Europe, and seemed to know every one worth
knowing. But she volunteered nothing about herself except that she
frequently made use of the expression, 'When my husband was stationed at
Vienna,' or 'When my husband was promoted to Rome.' Once she said to me,
'I have often seen you at Monte Carlo. I saw you when you won the pigeon
championship.' I told her that I was not a pigeon shot, and she gave a
little start of surprise. 'Oh, I beg your pardon,' she said; 'I thought
you were Morton Hamilton, the English champion.' As a matter of fact, I do
look like Hamilton, but I know now that her object was to make me think
that she had no idea as to who I really was. She needn't have acted at
all, for I certainly had no suspicions of her, and was only too pleased to
have so charming a companion.</p>
<p>"The one thing that should have made me suspicious was the fact that at
every station she made some trivial excuse to get me out of the
compartment. She pretended that her maid was travelling back of us in one
of the second-class carriages, and kept saying she could not imagine why
the woman did not come to look after her, and if the maid did not turn up
at the next stop, would I be so very kind as to get out and bring her
whatever it was she pretended she wanted.</p>
<p>"I had taken my dressing-case from the rack to get out a novel, and had
left it on the seat opposite to mine, and at the end of the compartment
farthest from her. And once when I came back from buying her a cup of
chocolate, or from some other fool errand, I found her standing at my end
of the compartment with both hands on the dressing-bag. She looked at me
without so much as winking an eye, and shoved the case carefully into a
corner. 'Your bag slipped off on the floor,' she said. 'If you've got any
bottles in it, you had better look and see that they're not broken.'</p>
<p>"And I give you my word, I was such an ass that I did open the case and
looked all through it. She must have thought I <i>was</i> a Juggins. I get
hot all over whenever I remember it. But in spite of my dulness, and her
cleverness, she couldn't gain anything by sending me away, because what
she wanted was in the hand bag and every time she sent me away the hand
bag went with me.</p>
<p>"After the incident of the dressing-case her manner changed. Either in my
absence she had had time to look through it, or, when I was examining it
for broken bottles, she had seen everything it held.</p>
<p>"From that moment she must have been certain that the cigar-case, in which
she knew I carried the diamonds, was in the bag that was fastened to my
body, and from that time on she probably was plotting how to get it from
me. Her anxiety became most apparent. She dropped the great lady manner,
and her charming condescension went with it. She ceased talking, and, when
I spoke, answered me irritably, or at random. No doubt her mind was
entirely occupied with her plan. The end of our journey was drawing
rapidly nearer, and her time for action was being cut down with the speed
of the express train. Even I, unsuspicious as I was, noticed that
something was very wrong with her. I really believe that before we reached
Marseilles if I had not, through my own stupidity, given her the chance
she wanted, she might have stuck a knife in me and rolled me out on the
rails. But as it was, I only thought that the long journey had tired her.
I suggested that it was a very trying trip, and asked her if she would
allow me to offer her some of my cognac.</p>
<p>"She thanked me and said, 'No,' and then suddenly her eyes lighted, and
she exclaimed, 'Yes, thank you, if you will be so kind.'</p>
<p>"My flask was in the hand bag, and I placed it on my lap and with my thumb
slipped back the catch. As I keep my tickets and railroad guide in the
bag, I am so constantly opening it that I never bother to lock it, and the
fact that it is strapped to me has always been sufficient protection. But
I can appreciate now what a satisfaction, and what a torment too, it must
have been to that woman when she saw that the bag opened without a key.</p>
<p>"While we were crossing the mountains I had felt rather chilly and had
been wearing a light racing coat. But after the lamps were lighted the
compartment became very hot and stuffy, and I found the coat
uncomfortable. So I stood up, and, after first slipping the strap of the
bag over my head, I placed the bag in the seat next me and pulled off the
racing coat. I don't blame myself for being careless; the bag was still
within reach of my hand, and nothing would have happened if at that exact
moment the train had not stopped at Arles. It was the combination of my
removing the bag and our entering the station at the same instant which
gave the Princess Zichy the chance she wanted to rob me.</p>
<p>"I needn't say that she was clever enough to take it. The train ran into
the station at full speed and came to a sudden stop. I had just thrown my
coat into the rack, and had reached out my hand for the bag. In another
instant I would have had the strap around my shoulder. But at that moment
the Princess threw open the door of the compartment and beckoned wildly at
the people on the platform. 'Natalie!' she called, 'Natalie! here I am.
Come here! This way!' She turned upon me in the greatest excitement. 'My
maid!' she cried. 'She is looking for me. She passed the window without
seeing me. Go, please, and bring her back.' She continued pointing out of
the door and beckoning me with her other hand. There certainly was
something about that woman's tone which made one jump. When she was giving
orders you had no chance to think of anything else. So I rushed out on my
errand of mercy, and then rushed back again to ask what the maid looked
like.</p>
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<p>"'In black,' she answered, rising and blocking the door of the
compartment. 'All in black, with a bonnet!'</p>
<p>"The train waited three minutes at Aries, and in that time I suppose I
must have rushed up to over twenty women and asked, 'Are you Natalie?' The
only reason I wasn't punched with an umbrella or handed over to the police
was that they probably thought I was crazy.</p>
<p>"When I jumped back into the compartment the Princess was seated where I
had left her, but her eyes were burning with happiness. She placed her
hand on my arm almost affectionately, and said in a hysterical way, 'You
are very kind to me. I am so sorry to have troubled you.'</p>
<p>"I protested that every woman on the platform was dressed in black.</p>
<p>"'Indeed I am so sorry,' she said, laughing; and she continued to laugh
until she began to breathe so quickly that I thought she was going to
faint.</p>
<p>"I can see now that the last part of that journey must have been a
terrible half hour for her. She had the cigar-case safe enough, but she
knew that she herself was not safe. She understood if I were to open my
bag, even at the last minute, and miss the case, I would know positively
that she had taken it. I had placed the diamonds in the bag at the very
moment she entered the compartment, and no one but our two selves had
occupied it since. She knew that when we reached Marseilles she would
either be twenty thousand pounds richer than when she left Paris, or that
she would go to jail. That was the situation as she must have read it, and
I don't envy her her state of mind during that last half hour. It must
have been hell.</p>
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<p>"I saw that something was wrong, and in my innocence I even wondered if
possibly my cognac had not been a little too strong. For she suddenly
developed into a most brilliant conversationalist, and applauded and
laughed at everything I said, and fired off questions at me like a machine
gun, so that I had no time to think of anything but of what she was
saying. Whenever I stirred she stopped her chattering and leaned toward
me, and watched me like a cat over a mouse-hole. I wondered how I could
have considered her an agreeable travelling companion. I thought I would
have preferred to be locked in with a lunatic. I don't like to think how
she would have acted if I had made a move to examine the bag, but as I had
it safely strapped around me again, I did not open it, and I reached
Marseilles alive. As we drew into the station she shook hands with me and
grinned at me like a Cheshire cat.</p>
<p>"'I cannot tell you,' she said, 'how much I have to thank you for.' What
do you think of that for impudence!</p>
<p>"I offered to put her in a carriage, but she said she must find Natalie,
and that she hoped we would meet again at the hotel. So I drove off by
myself, wondering who she was, and whether Natalie was not her keeper.</p>
<p>"I had to wait several hours for the train to Nice, and as I wanted to
stroll around the city I thought I had better put the diamonds in the safe
of the hotel. As soon as I reached my room I locked the door, placed the
hand bag on the table and opened it. I felt among the things at the top of
it, but failed to touch the cigar-case. I shoved my hand in deeper, and
stirred the things about, but still I did not reach it. A cold wave swept
down my spine, and a sort of emptiness came to the pit of my stomach. Then
I turned red-hot, and the sweat sprung out all over me. I wet my lips with
my tongue, and said to myself, 'Don't be an ass. Pull yourself together,
pull yourself together. Take the things out, one at a time. It's there, of
course it's there. Don't be an ass.'</p>
<p>"So I put a brake on my nerves and began very carefully to pick out the
things one by one, but after another second I could not stand it, and I
rushed across the room and threw out everything on the bed. But the
diamonds were not among them. I pulled the things about and tore them open
and shuffled and rearranged and sorted them, but it was no use. The
cigar-case was gone. I threw everything in the dressing-case out on the
floor, although I knew it was useless to look for it there. I knew that I
had put it in the bag. I sat down and tried to think. I remembered I had
put it in the satchel at Paris just as that woman had entered the
compartment, and I had been alone with her ever since, so it was she who
had robbed me. But how? It had never left my shoulder. And then I
remembered that it had—that I had taken it off when I had changed my
coat and for the few moments that I was searching for Natalie. I
remembered that the woman had sent me on that goose chase, and that at
every other station she had tried to get rid of me on some fool errand.</p>
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<p>"I gave a roar like a mad bull, and I jumped down the stairs six steps at
a time.</p>
<p>"I demanded at the office if a distinguished lady of title, possibly a
Russian, had just entered the hotel.</p>
<p>"As I expected, she had not. I sprang into a cab and inquired at two other
hotels, and then I saw the folly of trying to catch her without outside
help, and I ordered the fellow to gallop to the office of the Chief of
Police. I told my story, and the ass in charge asked me to calm myself,
and wanted to take notes. I told him this was no time for taking notes,
but for doing something. He got wrathy at that, and I demanded to be taken
at once to his Chief. The Chief, he said, was very busy, and could not see
me. So I showed him my silver greyhound. In eleven years I had never used
it but once before. I stated in pretty vigorous language that I was a
Queen's Messenger, and that if the Chief of Police did not see me
instantly he would lose his official head. At that the fellow jumped off
his high horse and ran with me to his Chief,—a smart young chap, a
colonel in the army, and a very intelligent man.</p>
<p>"I explained that I had been robbed in a French railway carriage of a
diamond necklace belonging to the Queen of England, which her Majesty was
sending as a present to the Czarina of Russia. I pointed out to him that
if he succeeded in capturing the thief he would be made for life, and
would receive the gratitude of three great powers.</p>
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<p>"He wasn't the sort that thinks second thoughts are best. He saw Russian
and French decorations sprouting all over his chest, and he hit a bell,
and pressed buttons, and yelled out orders like the captain of a penny
steamer in a fog. He sent her description to all the city gates, and
ordered all cabmen and railway porters to search all trains leaving
Marseilles. He ordered all passengers on outgoing vessels to be examined,
and telegraphed the proprietors of every hotel and pension to send him a
complete list of their guests within the hour. While I was standing there
he must have given at least a hundred orders, and sent out enough
commissaires, sergeants de ville, gendarmes, bicycle police, and
plain-clothes Johnnies to have captured the entire German army. When they
had gone he assured me that the woman was as good as arrested already.
Indeed, officially, she was arrested; for she had no more chance of escape
from Marseilles than from the Chateau D'If.</p>
<p>"He told me to return to my hotel and possess my soul in peace. Within an
hour he assured me he would acquaint me with her arrest.</p>
<p>"I thanked him, and complimented him on his energy, and left him. But I
didn't share in his confidence. I felt that she was a very clever woman,
and a match for any and all of us. It was all very well for him to be
jubilant. He had not lost the diamonds, and had everything to gain if he
found them; while I, even if he did recover the necklace, would only be
where I was before I lost them, and if he did not recover it I was a
ruined man. It was an awful facer for me. I had always prided myself on my
record. In eleven years I had never mislaid an envelope, nor missed taking
the first train. And now I had failed in the most important mission that
had ever been intrusted to me. And it wasn't a thing that could be hushed
up, either. It was too conspicuous, too spectacular. It was sure to invite
the widest notoriety. I saw myself ridiculed all over the Continent, and
perhaps dismissed, even suspected of having taken the thing myself.</p>
<p>"I was walking in front of a lighted cafe, and I felt so sick and
miserable that I stopped for a pick-me-up. Then I considered that if I
took one drink I would probably, in my present state of mind, not want to
stop under twenty, and I decided I had better leave it alone. But my
nerves were jumping like a frightened rabbit, and I felt I must have
something to quiet them, or I would go crazy. I reached for my
cigarette-case, but a cigarette seemed hardly adequate, so I put it back
again and took out this cigar-case, in which I keep only the strongest and
blackest cigars. I opened it and stuck in my fingers, but instead of a
cigar they touched on a thin leather envelope. My heart stood perfectly
still. I did not dare to look, but I dug my finger nails into the leather
and I felt layers of thin paper, then a layer of cotton, and then they
scratched on the facets of the Czarina's diamonds!</p>
<p>"I stumbled as though I had been hit in the face, and fell back into one
of the chairs on the sidewalk. I tore off the wrappings and spread out the
diamonds on the cafe table; I could not believe they were real. I twisted
the necklace between my fingers and crushed it between my palms and tossed
it up in the air. I believe I almost kissed it. The women in the cafe
stood tip on the chairs to see better, and laughed and screamed, and the
people crowded so close around me that the waiters had to form a
bodyguard. The proprietor thought there was a fight, and called for the
police. I was so happy I didn't care. I laughed, too, and gave the
proprietor a five-pound note, and told him to stand every one a drink.
Then I tumbled into a fiacre and galloped off to my friend the Chief of
Police. I felt very sorry for him. He had been so happy at the chance I
gave him, and he was sure to be disappointed when he learned I had sent
him off on a false alarm.</p>
<p>"But now that I had found the necklace, I did not want him to find the
woman. Indeed, I was most anxious that she should get clear away, for if
she were caught the truth would come out, and I was likely to get a sharp
reprimand, and sure to be laughed at.</p>
<p>"I could see now how it had happened. In my haste to hide the diamonds
when the woman was hustled into the carriage, I had shoved the cigars into
the satchel, and the diamonds into the pocket of my coat. Now that I had
the diamonds safe again, it seemed a very natural mistake. But I doubted
if the Foreign Office would think so. I was afraid it might not appreciate
the beautiful simplicity of my secret hiding-place. So, when I reached the
police station, and found that the woman was still at large, I was more
than relieved.</p>
<p>"As I expected, the Chief was extremely chagrined when he learned of my
mistake, and that there was nothing for him to do. But I was feeling so
happy myself that I hated to have any one else miserable, so I suggested
that this attempt to steal the Czarina's necklace might be only the first
of a series of such attempts by an unscrupulous gang, and that I might
still be in danger.</p>
<p>"I winked at the Chief and the Chief smiled at me, and we went to Nice
together in a saloon car with a guard of twelve carabineers and twelve
plain-clothes men, and the Chief and I drank champagne all the way. We
marched together up to the hotel where the Russian Ambassador was
stopping, closely surrounded by our escort of carabineers, and delivered
the necklace with the most profound ceremony. The old Ambassador was
immensely impressed, and when we hinted that already I had been made the
object of an attack by robbers, he assured us that his Imperial Majesty
would not prove ungrateful.</p>
<p>"I wrote a swinging personal letter about the invaluable services of the
Chief to the French Minister of Foreign Affairs, and they gave him enough
Russian and French medals to satisfy even a French soldier. So, though he
never caught the woman, he received his just reward."</p>
<p>The Queen's Messenger paused and surveyed the faces of those about him in
some embarrassment.</p>
<p>"But the worst of it is," he added, "that the story must have got about;
for, while the Princess obtained nothing from me but a cigar-case and five
excellent cigars, a few weeks after the coronation the Czar sent me a gold
cigar-case with his monogram in diamonds. And I don't know yet whether
that was a coincidence, or whether the Czar wanted me to know that he knew
that I had been carrying the Czarina's diamonds in my pigskin cigar-case.
What do you fellows think?"</p>
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