Meredith Nicholson

The Port of Missing Men


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devoted yourself to the affairs of government. I have read—only to-day, in the Contemporary Review—an admirable tribute to your sagacity in handling the Servian affair. Your work was masterly. I followed it from the beginning with deepest interest."

      The old gentleman bowed half-unconsciously, for his thoughts were far away, as the vague stare in his small, shrewd eyes indicated.

      "But you are here for rest—one comes to Geneva at this season for nothing else."

      "What brings you here?" asked the old man with sudden energy. "If the papers you gave me in Paris are forgeries and you are waiting—"

      "Yes; assuming that, what should I be waiting for?"

      "If you are waiting for events—for events! If you expect something to happen!"

      Armitage laughed at the old gentleman's earnest manner, asked if he might smoke, and lighted a cigarette.

      "Waiting doesn't suit me. I thought you understood that. I was not born for the waiting list. You see, I have strong hands—and my wits are—let us say—average!"

      Von Stroebel clasped his own hands together more firmly and bent toward

       Armitage searchingly.

      "Is it true"—he turned again and glanced about—"is it positively true that the Archduke Karl is dead?"

      "Yes; quite true. There is absolutely no doubt of it," said Armitage, meeting the old man's eyes steadily.

      "The report that he is still living somewhere in North America is persistent. We hear it frequently in Vienna; I have heard it since you told me that story and gave me those papers in Paris last year."

      "I am aware of that," replied John Armitage; "but I told you the truth. He died in a Canadian lumber camp. We were in the north hunting—you may recall that he was fond of that sort of thing."

      "Yes, I remember; there was nothing else he did so well," growled Von

       Stroebel.

      "And the packet I gave you—"

      The old man nodded.

      "—that packet contained the Archduke Karl's sworn arraignment of his wife. It is of great importance, indeed, to Francis, his worthless son, or supposed son, who may present himself for coronation one of these days!"

      "Not with Karl appearing in all parts of the world, never quite dead, never quite alive—and his son Frederick Augustus lurking with him in the shadows. Who knows whether they are dead?"

      "I am the only person on earth in a position to make that clear," said

       John Armitage.

      "Then you should give me the documents."

      "No; I prefer to keep them. I assure you that I have sworn proof of the death of the Archduke Karl, and of his son Frederick Augustus. Those papers are in a box in the Bronx Loan and Trust Company, in New York City."

      "I should have them; I must have them!" thundered the old man.

      "In due season; but not just now. In fact, I have regretted parting with that document I gave you in Paris. It is safer in America than in Vienna. If you please, I should like to have it again, sir."

      The palsy in the old man's hands had increased, and he strove to control his agitation; but fear had never been reckoned among his weaknesses, and he turned stormily upon Armitage.

      "That packet is lost, I tell you!" he blurted, as though it were something that he had frequently explained before. "It was stolen from under my very nose only a month ago! That's what I'm here for—my agents are after the thief, and I came to Geneva to meet them, to find out why they have not caught him. Do you imagine that I travel for pleasure at my age, Mr. John Armitage?"

      Count von Stroebel's bluster was merely a cloak to hide his confusion—a cloak, it may be said, to which he did not often resort; but in this case he watched Armitage warily. He clearly expected some outburst of indignation from the young man, and he was unfeignedly relieved when Armitage, after opening and closing his eyes quickly, reached for a fresh cigarette and lighted it with the deft ease of habit.

      "The packet has been stolen," he observed calmly; "whom do you suspect of taking it?"

      The old man leaned upon the table heavily.

      "That amiable Francis—"

      "The suggestion is not dismaying. Francis would not know an opportunity if it offered."

      "But his mother—she is the devil!" blurted the old man.

      "Pray drop that," said Armitage in a tone that caused the old man to look at him with a new scrutiny. "I want the paper back for the very reason that it contains that awful indictment of her. I have been uncomfortable ever since I gave it to you; and I came to ask you for it that I might keep it safe in my own hands. But the document is lost—am I to understand that Francis has it?"

      "Not yet! But Rambaud has it, and Rambaud and Francis are as thick as thieves."

      "I don't know Rambaud. The name is unfamiliar."

      "He has a dozen names—one for every capital. He even operates in Washington, I have heard. He's a blackmailer, who aims high—a broker in secrets, a scandal-peddler. He's a bad lot, I tell you. I've had my best men after him, and they've just been here to report another failure. If you have nothing better to do—" began the old man.

      "Yes; that packet must be recovered," answered Armitage. "If your agents have failed at the job it may be worth my while to look for it."

      His quiet acceptance of the situation irritated the minister.

      "You entertain me, John Armitage! You speak of that packet as though it were a pound of tea. Francis and his friends, Winkelried and Rambaud, are not chasers of fireflies, I would have you know. If the Archduke and his son are dead, then a few more deaths and Francis would rule the Empire."

      John Armitage and Count von Stroebel stared at each other in silence.

      "Events! Events!" muttered the old man presently, and he rested one of his hands upon the despatch box, as though it were a symbol of authority and power.

      "Events!" the young man murmured.

      "Events!" repeated Count von Stroebel without humor. "A couple of deaths and there you see him, on the ground and quite ready. Karl was a genius, therefore he could not be king. He threw away about five hundred years of work that had been done for him by other people—and he cajoled you into sharing his exile. You threw away your life for him! Bah! But you seem sane enough!"

      The prime minister concluded with his rough burr; and Armitage laughed outright.

      "Why the devil don't you go to Vienna and set yourself up like a gentleman?" demanded the premier.

      "Like a gentleman?" repeated Armitage. "It is too late. I should die in Vienna in a week. Moreover, I am dead, and it is well, when one has attained that beatific advantage, to stay dead."

      "Francis is a troublesome blackguard," declared the old man. "I wish to God he would form the dying habit, so that I might have a few years in peace; but he is forever turning up in some mischief. And what can you do about it? Can we kick him out of the army without a scandal? Don't you suppose he could go to Budapest tomorrow and make things interesting for us if he pleased? He's as full of treason as he can stick, I tell you."

      Armitage nodded and smiled.

      "I dare say," he said in English; and when the old statesman glared at him he said in German: "No doubt you are speaking the truth."

      "Of course I speak the truth; but this is a matter for action, and not for discussion. That packet was stolen by intention, and not by chance, John Armitage!"

      There was a slight immaterial sound in the hall, and the old prime minister slipped from German to French without changing countenance as he continued: