The Golden Triangle Maurice Leblanc (smart books to read .txt) đ
- Author: Maurice Leblanc
Book online «The Golden Triangle Maurice Leblanc (smart books to read .txt) đ». Author Maurice Leblanc
Patrice asked no more questions. He hurriedly got into his boat, pulled back to shore and found Don Luis seated with a comfortable supper in front of him.
âQuick!â he said. âThe cargo is on board a steamer, the Chamois. We can catch her up between Rouen and Le HĂąvre.â
Don Luis rose and handed the officer a white-paper packet:
âHereâs a few sandwiches for you, captain,â he said. âWeâve an arduous night before us. Iâm very sorry that you didnât get a sleep, as I did. Letâs be off, and this time I shall drive. Weâll knock some pace out of her! Come and sit beside me, captain.â
They both stepped into the car; the chauffeur took his seat behind them. But they had hardly started when Patrice exclaimed:
âHi! What are you up to? Not this way! Weâre going back to Mantes or Paris!â
âThatâs what I mean to do,â said Luis, with a chuckle.
âEh, what? Paris?â
âWell, of course!â
âOh, look here, this is a bit too thick! Didnât I tell you that the two bargeesâ ââ âŠâ?â
âThose bargees of yours are humbugs.â
âThey declared that the cargoâ ââ âŠâ
âCargo? No go!â
âBut the Chamoisâ ââ âŠâ
âChamois? Sham was! I tell you once more, weâre done, captain, done brown! Old SimĂ©on is a wonderful old hand! Heâs a match worth meeting. He gives you a run for your money. He laid a trap in which Iâve been fairly caught. Itâs a magnificent joke, but thereâs moderation in all things. Weâve been fooled enough to last us the rest of our lives. Letâs be serious now.â
âButâ ââ âŠâ
âArenât you satisfied yet, captain? After the Belle HĂ©lĂšne do you want to attack the Chamois? As you please. You can get out at Mantes: Only, I warn you, SimĂ©on is in Paris, with three or four hoursâ start of us.â
Patrice gave a shudder. Siméon in Paris! In Paris, where Coralie was alone and unprotected! He made no further protest; and Don Luis ran on:
âOh, the rascal! How well he played his hand! The Memoirs of Benjamin Franklin were a master stroke. Knowing of my arrival, he said to himself, âArsĂšne Lupin is a dangerous fellow, capable of disentangling the affair and putting both me and the bags of gold in his pocket. To get rid of him, thereâs only one thing to be done: I must act in such a way as to make him rush along the real track at so fast a rate of speed that he does not perceive the moment when the real track becomes a false track.â That was clever of him, wasnât it? And so we have the Franklin book, held out as a bait; the page opening of itself, at the right place; my inevitable easy discovery of the conduit system; the clue of Ariadne most obligingly offered. I follow up the clue like a trusting child, led by SimĂ©onâs own hand, from the cellar down to Berthouâs Wharf. So far allâs well. But, from that moment, take care! Thereâs nobody at Berthouâs Wharf. On the other hand, thereâs a barge alongside, which means a chance of making enquiries, which means the certainty that I shall make enquiries. And I make enquiries. And, having made enquiries, I am done for.â
âBut then that manâ ââ âŠâ?â
âYes, yes, yes, an accomplice of SimĂ©onâs, whom SimĂ©on, knowing that he would be followed to the Gare Saint-Lazare, instructs in this way to direct me to Mantes for the second time. At Mantes the comedy continues. The Belle HĂ©lĂšne passes, with her double freight, SimĂ©on and the bags of gold. We go running after the Belle HĂ©lĂšne. Of course, on the Belle HĂ©lĂšne thereâs nothing: no SimĂ©on, no bags of gold. âRun after the Chamois. Weâve transhipped it all on the Chamois.â We run after the Chamois, to Rouen, to Le HĂąvre, to the end of the world; and of course our pursuit is fruitless, for the Chamois does not exist. But we are convinced that she does exist and that she has escaped our search. And by this time the trick is played. The millions are gone, SimĂ©on has disappeared and there is only one thing left for us to do, which is to resign ourselves and abandon our quest. You understand, weâre to abandon our quest: thatâs the fellowâs object. And he would have succeeded ifâ ââ âŠâ
The car was traveling at full speed. From time to time Don Luis would stop her dead with extraordinary skill. Post of territorials. Pass to be produced. Then a leap onward and once more the breakneck pace.
âIf what?â asked Patrice, half-convinced. âWhich was the clue that put you on the track?â
âThe presence of that woman at Mantes. It was a vague clue at first. But suddenly I remembered that, in the first barge, the Nonchalante, the person who gave us informationâ âdo you recollect?â âwell, that this person somehow gave me the queer impression, I canât tell you why, that I might be talking to a woman in disguise. The impression occurred to me once more. I made a mental comparison with the woman at Mantes.â ââ ⊠And thenâ ââ ⊠and then it was like a flash of light.â ââ âŠâ
Don Luis paused to think and, in a lower voice, continued:
âBut who the devil can this woman be?â
There was a brief silence, after which Patrice said, from instinct rather than reason:
âGrĂ©goire, I suppose.â
âEh? Whatâs that? GrĂ©goire?â
âYes. Yes, GrĂ©goire is a woman.â
âWhat are you talking about?â
âWell, obviously. Donât you remember? The accomplice told me so, on the day when I had them arrested outside the cafĂ©.â
âWhy, your diary doesnât say a word about it!â
âOh, thatâs true!â ââ ⊠I forgot to put down that detail.â
âA detail! He calls it a detail! Why, itâs of the greatest importance, captain! If I had known, I should have guessed that that bargee was no other than GrĂ©goire and we should not have wasted a whole night. Hang it all, captain, you really are the limit!â
But all this was unable to affect his good-humor. While Patrice, overcome
Comments (0)