Every one in our party at the Hotel Grenade rose very early the next morning. That day was to be one of activity and event. Mrs. Cliff, who had not slept one wink1 during the night, but who appeared almost rejuvenated2 by the ideas which had come to her during her sleeplessness3, now entered a protest against the proposed marriage at the American legation. She believed that people of the position which Edna and the captain should now assume ought to be married in a church, with all proper ceremony and impressiveness, and urged that the wedding be postponed4 for a few days, until suitable arrangements could be made.
But Edna would not listen to this. The captain was obliged, by appointment, to be in London on the morrow, and he could not know how long he might be detained there, and now, wherever he went, she wished to go with him. He wanted her to be with him, and she was going. Moreover, she fancied a wedding at the legation. There were all sorts of regulations concerning marriage in France, and to these neither she nor the captain cared to conform, even if they had time enough for the purpose. At the American legation they would be in point of law upon American soil, and there they could be married as Americans, by an American minister.
After that Mrs. Cliff gave up. She was so happy she was ready to agree to anything, or to believe in anything, and she went to work with heart and hand to assist Edna in getting ready for the great event.
Mrs. Sylvester, the wife of the secretary, received a note from Edna which brought her to the hotel as fast as horses were allowed to travel in the streets of Paris, and arrangements were easily made for the ceremony to take place at four o'clock that afternoon.
The marriage was to be entirely5 private. No one was to be present but Mrs. Cliff, Ralph, and Mrs. Sylvester. Nothing was said to Cheditafa of the intended ceremony. After what had happened, they all felt that it would be right to respect the old negro's feelings and sensibilities. Mrs. Cliff undertook, after a few days had elapsed, to explain the whole matter to Cheditafa, and to tell him that what he had done had not been without importance and real utility, but that it had actually united his master and mistress by a solemn promise before witnesses, which in some places, and under certain circumstances, would be as good a marriage as any that could be performed, but that a second ceremony had taken place in order that the two might be considered man and wife in all places and under all circumstances.
The captain had hoped to see Shirley and Burke before he left Paris, but that was now impossible, and, on his way to his hotel, after breakfasting at the Hotel Grenade, he telegraphed to them to come to him in London. He had just sent his telegram when he was touched on the arm, and, turning, saw standing6 by him two police officers. Their manner was very civil, but they promptly7 informed him, the speaker using very fair English, that he must accompany them to the presence of a police magistrate8.
The captain was astounded9. The officers could or would give him no information in regard to the charge against him, or whether it was a charge at all. They only said that he must come with them, and that everything would be explained at the police station. The captain's brow grew black. What this meant he could not imagine, but he had no time to waste in imaginations. It would be foolish to demand explanations of the officers, or to ask to see the warrant for their action. He would not understand French warrants, and the quicker he went to the magistrate and found out what this thing meant, the better. He only asked time to send a telegram to Mr. Wraxton, urging him to attend him instantly at the police station, and then he went with the officers.
On the way, Captain Horn turned over matters in his mind. He could think of no cause for this detention10, except it might be something which had turned up in connection with his possession of the treasure, or perhaps the entrance of the Arato, without papers, at the French port. But anything of this kind Wraxton could settle as soon as he could be made acquainted with it. The only real trouble was that he was to be married at four o'clock, and it was now nearly two.
At the police station, Captain Horn met with a fresh annoyance11. The magistrate was occupied with important business and could not attend to him at present. This made the captain very impatient, and he sent message after message to the magistrate, but to no avail. And Wraxton did not come. In fact, it was too soon to expect him.
The magistrate had good reason for delay. He did not wish to have anything to do with the gentleman who had been taken in custody12 until his accuser, Banker by name, had been brought to this station from his place of confinement13, where he was now held under a serious charge.
Ten minutes, twenty minutes, twenty-five minutes, passed, and the magistrate did not appear. Wraxton did not come. The captain had never been so fiercely impatient. He did not know to whom to apply in this serious emergency. He did not wish Edna to know of his trouble until he found out the nature of it, and if he sent word to the legation, he was afraid that the news would speedily reach her. Wraxton was his man, whatever the charge might be. He would be his security for any amount which might be named, and the business might be settled afterwards, if, indeed, it were not all a mistake of some sort.
But Wraxton did not appear. Suddenly the captain thought of one man who might be of service to him in this emergency. There was no time for delay. Some one must come, and come quickly, who could identify him, and the only man he could think of was Professor Barré, Ralph's tutor. He had met that gentleman the evening before. He could vouch14 for him, and he could certainly be trusted not to alarm Edna unnecessarily. He believed the professor could be found at the hotel, and he instantly sent a messenger to him with a note.
It took a good deal of time to bring the prisoner Banker to the station, and Professor Barré arrived there before him. The professor was amazed to find Captain Horn under arrest, and unable to give any reason for this state of things. But it was not long before the magistrate appeared, and it so happened that he was acquainted with Barré, who was a well-known man in Paris, and, after glancing at the captain, he addressed himself to the professor, speaking in French. The latter immediately inquired the nature of the charges against Captain Horn, using the same language.
"Ah! you know him?" said the magistrate. "He has been accused of being the leader of a band of outlaws15—a man who has committed murders and outrages16 without number, one who should not be suffered to go at large, one who should be confined until the authorities of Peru, where his crimes were committed, have been notified."
The professor stared, but could not comprehend what he had heard.
"What is it?" inquired Captain Horn. "Can you not speak English?"
No, this Parisian magistrate could not speak English, but the professor explained the charge.
"It is the greatest absurdity17!" exclaimed the captain. "Ralph told me that a man, evidently once one of that band of outlaws in Peru, had been arrested for assaulting Cheditafa, and this charge must be part of his scheme of vengeance18 for that arrest. I could instantly prove everything that is necessary to know about me if my banker, Mr. Wraxton, were here. I have sent for him, but he has not come. I have not a moment to waste discussing this matter." The captain gazed anxiously toward the door, and for a few moments the three men stood in silence.
The situation was a peculiar19 one. The professor thought of sending to the Hotel Grenade, but he hesitated. He said to himself: "The lady's testimony21 would be of no avail. If he is the man the bandit says he is, of course she does not know it. His conduct has been very strange, and for a long time she certainly knew very little about him. I don't see how even his banker could become surety for him if he were here, and he doesn't seem inclined to come. Anybody may have a bank-account."
The professor stood looking on the ground. The captain looked at him, and, by that power to read the thoughts of others which an important emergency often gives to a man, he read, or believed he did, the thoughts of Barré. He did not blame the man for his doubts. Any one might have such doubts. A stranger coming to France with a cargo22 of gold must expect suspicion, and here was more—a definite charge.
At this moment there came a message from the banking23 house: Mr. Wraxton had gone to Brussels that morning. Fuguet did not live in Paris, and the captain had never seen him. There were clerks whom he had met in Marseilles, but, of course, they could only say that he was the man known as Captain Horn.
The captain ground his teeth, and then, suddenly turning, he interrupted the conversation between the magistrate and Barré. He addressed the latter and asked, "Will you tell me what this officer has been saying about me?"
"He says," answered Barré, "that he believes you know nobody in Paris except the party at the Hotel Grenade, and that, of course, you may have deceived them in regard to your identity—that they have been here a long time, and you have been absent, and you have not been referred to by them, which seems strange."
"Has he not found out that Wraxton knows me?"
"He says," answered Barré, "that you have not visited that banking house since you came to Paris, and that seems strange also. Every traveller goes to his banker as soon as he arrives."
"I did not need to go there," said the captain. "I was occupied with other matters. I had just met my wife after a long absence."
"I don't wonder," said the professor, bowing, "that your time was occupied. It is very unfortunate that your banker cannot come to you or send."
The captain did not answer. This professor doubted him, and why should he not? As the captain considered the case, it grew more and more serious. That his marriage should be delayed on account of such a preposterous24 and outrageous25 charge against him was bad enough. It would be a terrible blow to Edna. For, although he knew that she would believe in him, she could not deny, if she were questioned, that in this age of mail and telegraph facilities she had not heard from him for nearly a year, and it would be hard for her to prove that he had not deceived her. But the most unfortunate thing of all was the meeting with the London lawyers the next day. These men were engaged in settling a very important question regarding the ownership of the treasure he had brought to France, and his claims upon it, and if they should hear that he had been charged with being the captain of a band of murderers and robbers, they might well have their suspicions of the truth of his story of the treasure. In fact, everything might be lost, and the affair might end by his being sent a prisoner to Peru, to have the case investigated there. What might happen then was too terrible to think of. He turned abruptly26 to the professor.
"I see that you don't believe in me," he said, "but I see that you are a man, and I believe in you. You are acquainted with this magistrate. Use your influence with him to have this matter settled quickly. Do as much as that for me."
"What is it that you ask me to do?" said the other.
"It is this," replied the captain. "I have never seen this man who says he was a member of the Rackbirds' band. In fact, I never saw any of those wretches27 except dead ones. He has never met me. He knows nothing about me. His charge is simply a piece of revenge. The only connection he can make between me and the Rackbirds is that he knew two negroes were once the servants of his band, and that they are now the servants of my wife. Having never seen me, he cannot know me. Please ask the magistrate to send for some other men in plain clothes to come into this room, and then let the prisoner be brought here, and asked to point out the man he charges with the crime of being the captain of the Rackbirds."
The professor's face brightened, and without answer he turned to the magistrate, and laid this proposition before him. The officer shook his head. This would be a very irregular method of procedure. There were formalities which should not be set aside. The deposition28 of Banker should be taken before witnesses. But the professor was interested in Captain Horn's proposed plan. In an emergency of the sort, when time was so valuable, he thought it should be tried before anything else was done. He talked very earnestly to the magistrate, who at last yielded.
In a few minutes three respectable men were brought in from outside, and then a policeman was sent for Banker.
When that individual entered the waiting-room, his eyes ran rapidly over the company assembled there. After the first glance, he believed that he had never seen one of them before. But he said nothing; he waited to hear what would be said to him. This was said quickly. Banker spoke29 French, and the magistrate addressed him directly.
"In this room," he said, "stands the man you have accused as a robber and a murderer, as the captain of the band to which you admit you once belonged. Point him out immediately."
Banker's heart was not in the habit of sinking, but it went down a little now. Could it be possible that any one there had ever led him to deeds of violence and blood? He looked again at each man in the room, very carefully this time. Of course, that rascal30 Raminez would not come to Paris without disguising himself, and no disguise could be so effectual as the garb31 of a gentleman. But if Raminez were there, he should not escape him by any such tricks. Banker half shut his eyes, and again went over every countenance32. Suddenly he smiled.
"My captain," he said presently, "is not dressed exactly as he was when I last saw him. He is in good clothes now, and that made it a little hard for me to recognize him at first. But there is no mistaking his nose and his eyebrows33. I know him as well as if we had been drinking together last night. There he stands!" And, with his right arm stretched out, he pointed34 directly to Professor Barré.
At these words there was a general start, and the face of the magistrate grew scarlet35 with anger. As for the professor himself, he knit his brows, and looked at Banker in amazement36.
"You scoundrel! You liar20! You beast!" cried the officer. "To accuse this well-known and honorable gentleman, and say that he is a leader of a band of robbers! You are an impostor, a villain37, and if you had been confronted with this other gentleman alone, you would have sworn that he was a bandit chief!"
Banker made no answer, but still kept his eyes fixed38 upon the professor. Now Captain Horn spoke: "That fellow had to say something, and he made a very wild guess of it," he said to Barré. "I think the matter may now be considered settled. Will you suggest as much to the magistrate? Truly, I have not a moment to spare."
Banker listened attentively39 to these words, and his eyes sparkled.
"You needn't try any of your tricks on me, you scoundrel Raminez," he said, shaking his fist at the professor. "I know you. I know you better than I did when I first spoke. If you wanted to escape me, you ought to have shaved off your eyebrows when you trimmed your hair and your beard. But I will be after you yet. The tales you have told here won't help you."
"Take him away!" shouted the magistrate. "He is a fiend!"
Banker was hurried from the room by two policemen.
To the profuse40 apologies of the magistrate Captain Horn had no time to listen; he accepted what he heard of them as a matter of course, and only remarked that, as he was not the man against whom the charges had been brought, he must hurry away to attend to a most important appointment. The professor went with him into the street.
"Sir," said the captain, addressing Barré, "you have been of the most important service to me, and I heartily41 acknowledge the obligation. Had it not been that you were good enough to exert your influence with the magistrate, that rascal would have sworn through thick and thin that I had been his captain."
Then, looking at his watch, he said, "It is twenty-five minutes to four. I shall take a cab and go directly to the legation. I was on my way to my hotel, but there is no time for that now," and, after shaking hands with the professor, he hailed a cab.
Captain Horn reached the legation but a little while after the party from the Hotel Grenade had arrived, and in due time he stood up beside Edna in one of the parlors42 of the mansion43, and he and she were united in marriage by the American minister. The services were very simple, but the congratulations of the little company assembled could not have been more earnest and heartfelt.
"Now," said Mrs. Cliff, in the ear of Edna, "if we knew that that gold was all to be sunk in the ocean to-morrow, we still ought to be the happiest people on earth."
She was a true woman, Mrs. Cliff, and at that moment she meant what she said.
It had been arranged that the whole party should return to the Hotel Grenade, and from there the newly married couple should start for the train which would take them to Calais; and, as he left the legation promptly, the captain had time to send to his own hotel for his effects. The direct transition from the police station to the bridal altar had interfered44 with his ante-hymeneal preparations, but the captain was accustomed to interference with preparations, and had long learned to dispense45 with them when occasion required.
"I don't believe," said the minister's wife to her husband, when the bridal party had left, "that you ever before married such a handsome couple."
"The fact is," said he, "that I never before saw standing together such a fine specimen46 of a man and such a beautiful, glowing, radiant woman."
"I don't see why you need say that," said she, quickly. "You and I stood up together."
"Yes," he replied, with a smile, "but I wasn't a spectator."
点击收听单词发音
1 wink | |
n.眨眼,使眼色,瞬间;v.眨眼,使眼色,闪烁 | |
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2 rejuvenated | |
更生的 | |
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3 sleeplessness | |
n.失眠,警觉 | |
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4 postponed | |
vt.& vi.延期,缓办,(使)延迟vt.把…放在次要地位;[语]把…放在后面(或句尾)vi.(疟疾等)延缓发作(或复发) | |
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5 entirely | |
ad.全部地,完整地;完全地,彻底地 | |
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6 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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7 promptly | |
adv.及时地,敏捷地 | |
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8 magistrate | |
n.地方行政官,地方法官,治安官 | |
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9 astounded | |
v.使震惊(astound的过去式和过去分词);愕然;愕;惊讶 | |
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10 detention | |
n.滞留,停留;拘留,扣留;(教育)留下 | |
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11 annoyance | |
n.恼怒,生气,烦恼 | |
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12 custody | |
n.监护,照看,羁押,拘留 | |
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13 confinement | |
n.幽禁,拘留,监禁;分娩;限制,局限 | |
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14 vouch | |
v.担保;断定;n.被担保者 | |
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15 outlaws | |
歹徒,亡命之徒( outlaw的名词复数 ); 逃犯 | |
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16 outrages | |
引起…的义愤,激怒( outrage的第三人称单数 ) | |
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17 absurdity | |
n.荒谬,愚蠢;谬论 | |
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18 vengeance | |
n.报复,报仇,复仇 | |
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19 peculiar | |
adj.古怪的,异常的;特殊的,特有的 | |
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20 liar | |
n.说谎的人 | |
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21 testimony | |
n.证词;见证,证明 | |
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22 cargo | |
n.(一只船或一架飞机运载的)货物 | |
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23 banking | |
n.银行业,银行学,金融业 | |
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24 preposterous | |
adj.荒谬的,可笑的 | |
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25 outrageous | |
adj.无理的,令人不能容忍的 | |
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26 abruptly | |
adv.突然地,出其不意地 | |
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27 wretches | |
n.不幸的人( wretch的名词复数 );可怜的人;恶棍;坏蛋 | |
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28 deposition | |
n.免职,罢官;作证;沉淀;沉淀物 | |
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29 spoke | |
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说 | |
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30 rascal | |
n.流氓;不诚实的人 | |
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31 garb | |
n.服装,装束 | |
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32 countenance | |
n.脸色,面容;面部表情;vt.支持,赞同 | |
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33 eyebrows | |
眉毛( eyebrow的名词复数 ) | |
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34 pointed | |
adj.尖的,直截了当的 | |
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35 scarlet | |
n.深红色,绯红色,红衣;adj.绯红色的 | |
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36 amazement | |
n.惊奇,惊讶 | |
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37 villain | |
n.反派演员,反面人物;恶棍;问题的起因 | |
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38 fixed | |
adj.固定的,不变的,准备好的;(计算机)固定的 | |
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39 attentively | |
adv.聚精会神地;周到地;谛;凝神 | |
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40 profuse | |
adj.很多的,大量的,极其丰富的 | |
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41 heartily | |
adv.衷心地,诚恳地,十分,很 | |
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42 parlors | |
客厅( parlor的名词复数 ); 起居室; (旅馆中的)休息室; (通常用来构成合成词)店 | |
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43 mansion | |
n.大厦,大楼;宅第 | |
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44 interfered | |
v.干预( interfere的过去式和过去分词 );调停;妨碍;干涉 | |
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45 dispense | |
vt.分配,分发;配(药),发(药);实施 | |
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46 specimen | |
n.样本,标本 | |
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