The Council of Justice by Edgar Wallace (best new books to read TXT) đ
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âAlso in England,â he said.
âWhat is your name?â she asked. By an oversight it was a question
âshe had not put before.
The man shrugged his shoulders.
âDoes it matter?â he asked. A thought struck her. In the hall she
had seen Magnus the Jew. He had lived for many years in England, and
she beckoned him.
âOf what class is this man?â she asked in a whisper.
âOf the lower orders,â he replied; âit is astoundingâdid you not
notice whenâno, you did not see his capture. But he spoke like a man
of the streets, dropping his aspirates.â
He saw she looked puzzled and explained.
âIt is a trick of the orderâjust as the Moujik saysâŠâ he treated
her to a specimen of colloquial Russian.
âWhat is your name?â she asked again.
He looked at her slyly.
âIn Russia they called me Father KopabâŠâ
The majority of those who were present were Russian, and at the word
they sprang to their feet, shrinking back with ashen faces, as though
they feared contact with the man who stood bound and helpless in the
middle of the room.
The Woman of Gratz had risen with the rest. Her lips quivered and
her wide open eyes spoke her momentary terror.
âI killed Starque,â he went on, âby authority. Francois also. Some
dayââhe looked leisurely about the roomââI shall alsoââ
âStop!â she cried, and then:
âRelease him,â she said, and, wonderingly, Schmidt cut the bonds
that bound him. He stretched himself.
âWhen you took me,â he said, âI had a book; you will understand that
here in England I findâforgetfulness in booksâand I, who have seen so
much suffering and want caused through departure from the law, am
striving as hard for the regeneration of mankind as youâbut
differently.â
Somebody handed him a book.
He looked at it, nodded, and slipped it into his pocket.
âFarewell,â he said as he turned to the open door.
âIn Godâs name!â said the Woman of Gratz, trembling, âgo in peace,
Little Father.â
And the man Jessen, sometime headsman to the Supreme Council, and
latterly public executioner of England, walked out, no man barring his
exit.
The power of the Red Hundred was broken. This much Falmouth knew. He
kept an ever-vigilant band of men on duty at the great termini of
London, and to these were attached the members of a dozen secret police
forces of Europe. Day by day, there was the same report to make. Such
and such a man, whose very presence in London had been unsuspected, had
left via Harwich. So-and-so, surprisingly sprung from nowhere, had gone
by the eleven oâclock train from Victoria; by the Hull and Stockholm
route twenty had gone in one day, and there were others who made
Liverpool, Glasgow, and Newcastle their port of embarkation.
I think that it was only then that Scotland Yard realized the
strength of the force that had lain inert in the metropolis, or
appreciated the possibilities for destruction that had been to hand in
the days of the Terror.
Certainly every batch of names that appeared on the commissionerâs
desk made him more thoughtful than ever.
âArrest them!â he said in horror when the suggestion was made.
âArrest them! Look here, have you ever seen driver ants attack a house
in Africa? Marching in, in endless battalions at midnight and clearing
out everything living from chickens to beetles? Have you ever seen them
re-form in the morning and go marching home again? You wouldnât think
of arresting âem, would you? No, youâd just sit down quietly out of
their reach and be happy when the last little red leg has disappeared
round the corner!â
Those who knew the Red Hundred best were heartily in accord with his
philosophy.
âThey caught Jessen,â reported Falmouth. âOh!â said the
commissioner.
âWhen he disclosed his identity, they got rid of him quick.â
âIâve often wondered why the Four Just Men didnât do the business of
Starque themselves,â mused the Commissioner.
âIt was rather rum,â admitted Falmouth, âbut Starque was a man under
sentence, as also was Francois. By some means they got hold of the
original warrants, and it was on these that Jessenâdid what he
did.â
The commissioner nodded. âAnd now,â he asked, âwhat about them?â
Falmouth had expected this question sooner or later. âDo you suggest
that we should catch them, sir?â-he asked with thinly veiled sarcasm;
âbecause if you do, sir, I have only to remind you that weâve been
trying to do that for some years.â The chief commissioner frowned.
âItâs a remarkable thing,â he said, âthat as soon as we get a
situation such asâthe Red Hundred scare and the Four Just Men scare,
for instance, weâre completely at sea, and thatâs what the papers will
say. It doesnât sound creditable, but itâs so.â
âI place the superintendentâs defence of Scotland Yard on record
in extenso.â
âWhat the papers say,â said Falmouth, ânever keeps me awake at
night. Nobodyâs quite got the hang of the police force in this
countryâcertainly the writing people havenât.
âThere are two ways of writing about the police, sir. One way is to deal
with them in the newspaper fashion with the headline âAnother Police
Blunderâ or âThe Police and The Publicâ, and the other way is to deal
with them in the magazine style, which is to show them as softies on the
wrong scent, whilst an ornamental civilian is showing them their
business, or as mysterious people with false beards who pop up at the
psychological moment, and say in a loud voice, âIn the name of the Law,
I arrest you!ââ
âWell, I donât mind admitting that I know neither kind. Iâve been a
police officer for twenty-three years, and the only assistance Iâve had
from a civilian was from a man named Blackie, who helped me to find the
body of a woman that had disappeared. I was rather prejudiced against
him, but I donât mind admitting that he was pretty smart and followed
his clues with remarkable ingenuity.
âThe day we found the body I said to him:
ââMr. Blackie, you have given me a great deal of information
about this womanâs movementsâin fact, you know a great deal more than
you ought to knowâso I shall take you into custody on the suspicion of
having caused her death.â
âBefore he died he made a full confession, and ever since then I
have always been pleased to take as much advice and help from outside
as I could get.
âWhen people sometimes ask me about the cleverness of Scotland Yard,
I canât tell âem tales such as you read about. Iâve had murderers,
anarchists, burglars, and average low-down people to deal with, but
they have mostly done their work in a commonplace way and bolted. And
as soon as they have bolted, weâve employed fairly commonplace methods
and brought âem back.
âIf you ask me whether Iâve been in dreadful danger, when arresting
desperate murderers and criminals, I say âNoâ.
âWhen your average criminal finds himself cornered, he says,
âAll right, Mr. Falmouth; itâs a copâ, and goes quietly.
âCrime and criminals run in grooves. Theyâre hardy annuals with
perennial methods. Extraordinary circumstances baffle the police as
they baffle other folks. You canât run a business on business lines and
be absolutely prepared for anything that turns up. Whiteleyâs will
supply you with a flea or an elephant, but if a woman asked a shopgirl
to hold her baby whilst she went into the tinned meat department, the
girl and the manager and the whole system would be floored, because
there is no provision for holding babies. And if a Manchester goods
merchant, unrolling his stuff, came upon a snake lying all snug in the
bale, heâd be floored too, because natural history isnât part of their
business training, and they wouldnât be quite sure whether it was a big
worm or a boa constrictor.â
The Commissioner was amused.
âYouâve an altogether unexpected sense of humour,â he said, âand the
moral isââ
âThat the unexpected always floors you, whether itâs humour or
crime,â said Falmouth, and went away fairly pleased with himself.
In his room he found a waiting messenger.
âA lady to see you, sir.â
âWho is it?â he asked in surprise.
The messenger handed him a slip of paper and when he read it he
whistled.
âThe unexpected, byâ! Show her up.â
On the paper was writtenââThe Woman of GratzâŠâ
CHAPTER XI. Manfred
Manfred sat alone in his Lewisham house,âhe was known to the old
lady who was his caretaker as âa foreign gentleman in the music
lineââand in the subdued light of the shaded lamp, he looked tired. A
book lay on the table near at hand, and a silver coffee-service and an
empty coffee-cup stood on the stool by his side. Reaction he felt. This
strange man had set himself to a task that was never ending. The
destruction of the forces of the Red Hundred was the end of a fight
that cleared the ground for the commencement of anotherâbut physically
he was weary.
Gonsalez had left that morning for Paris, Poiccart went by the
afternoon train, and he was to join them tomorrow.
The strain of the fight had told on them, all three. Financially,
the cost of the war had been heavy, but that strain they could stand
better than any other, for had they not the fortune ofâCourtlander; in
case of need they knew their man.
All the world had been searched before theyâthe first Fourâhad
come togetherâManfred, Gonsalez, Poiccart, and the man who slept
eternally in the flower-grown grave at Bordeaux. As men taking the
oaths of priesthood they lived down the passions and frets of life.
Each man was an open book to the other, speaking his most secret
thought in the faith of sympathy, one dominating thought controlling
them all.
They had made the name of the Four Just Men famous or infamous
(according to your point of reckoning) throughout the civilized world.
They came as a new force into public and private life. There were men,
free of the law, who worked misery on their fellows; dreadful human
ghouls fattening on the bodies and souls of the innocent and helpless;
great magnates calling the law to their aid, or pushing it aside as
circumstances demanded. All these became amenable to a new law, a new
tribunal. There had grown into being systems which defied correction;
corporations beyond chastisement; individuals protected by cunningly
drawn legislation, and others who knew to an inch the scope of
toleration. In the name of justice, these men struck swiftly,
dispassionately, mercilessly. The great swindler, the procureur,
the suborner of witnesses, the briber of juriesâthey died.
There was no gradation of punishment: a warning, a second
warningâthen death.
Thus their name became a symbol, at which the evildoer went
tremblingly about his work, dreading the warning and ready in most
cases to heed it. Life became a sweeter, a more wholesome thing for
many men who found the thin greenish-grey envelope on their
breakfast-table in the morning; but others persisted on their way,
loudly invoking the law, which in spirit, if not in letter, they had
outraged. The end was very sure, and I do not know of one man who
escaped the consequence.
Speculating on their identity, the police of the world decided
unanimously upon two points. The first was that these men were
enormously richâas indeed they were, and the second that one or two of
them were no mean scientistsâthat also was true. Of the
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