"Because if you don't, those newspaper articles will never be published."
"Ah, bah!" Naniescu exclaimed with a mocking grin, "who will prevent it?"
"I, of course."
"You, of course? How, I should like to know?"
"That's my business."
"You can't do it, my friend," Naniescu rejoined complacently. "You can't do it . I defy you to do it."
"Is that a challenge?"
Number Ten had said this very quietly. He was in the act of lighting a cigarette when he spoke, and he finished lighting it, blew out the match, and threw it into the nearest ash-tray before he glanced at Naniescu. Then he smiled, because Naniescu's face expressed arrogance first, then bewilderment, and finally indecision.
"Is it a challenge?" he reiterated sardonically. "I don't mind, you know, one way or the other. There are at least three governments—neighbours of yours, by the way—who will pay me ten thousand pounds apiece for certain services which they require, and which I can render them. But you have behaved like a knave and a fool, my friend, and it will amuse me to punish you. So listen to me! Unless you give me a cheque for the ten thousand pounds which you promised me, and which I can cash at your fusty old bank over the way this very afternoon, I guarantee you that Lady Tarkington's articles will not be published in any English newspaper."
He smoked on in silence for a little while longer, blowing rings of smoke through his pursed lips, and in the intervals laughing softly, mockingly to himself, or throwing an occasional glance of intelligence in the direction of Kervoisin, who apparently immersed in a book had taken no part in the conversation. Naniescu's bewilderment had become ludicrous, and at one moment when he took his perfumed handkerchief out of his pocket and mopped his streaming forehead, the face of his spy-in-chief became distorted with that look of ferocious cruelty which was so characteristic of him.
"I haven't a great deal of time to spare," Number Ten remarked drily, after a few minutes' silence; "if you accept my challenge I start for London to-night."
"You'll never get there in time," Naniescu rejoined, with an attempt at swagger.
Number Ten smiled. "Don't you think so?" he asked simply.
"The frontier is closed—"
"Would you rather risk it than pay me the ten thousand pounds?"
Naniescu appealed to his friend.
"De Kervoisin—" he said, almost pitiably.
But M. de Kervoisin, with a shrug, indicated that this was no concern of his.
"M. de Kervoisin," Number Ten said, still smiling, "knows my methods. During the war I had other and more dangerous frontiers to cross than this one, my friend—and I never failed."
In Naniescu's puny mind, obviously a war was waging between greed and avarice. He was seeing his beautiful day-dream vanishing into the intangible ether—whence come all dreams—and he was not prepared to take any risks. Those articles which a reliable courier was even now taking to London with all speed were the most precious things he, Naniescu, had ever possessed. They meant honour, security, money—far more money than Number Ten was demanding with such outrageous impudence. And Naniescu was afraid of Number Ten—afraid of his daring, is courage, his unscrupulous determination to carry through what he had set out to do.
Ten thousand pounds! It was a great deal, but it would come out of secret service funds, not out of Naniescu's own pocket. There was only that slight desire to get the better of Number Ten, to win this battle of wits against so crafty an opponent. But what was
Nevertheless he made one more effort at a bargain.
"If I pay you that the thousand," he said, with a savage oath, "what guarantee have I that the articles
"None," was Number Ten's cool reply; "but if you don't pay me the ten thousand, I guarantee that they will
At which M. de Kervoisin put down his book and indulged in a good laugh.
"Take care, my friend," he said to Number Ten, "our friend here is beginning to lose his temper, and you may find yourself under lock and key before he has done with you."
"I wonder!" Number Ten retorted drily "It would mean raising hell in the English press, wouldn't it? if a British subject—what?"
He did not pursue the subject. Even Naniescu himself had put such a possibility out of his reckoning.
"All that our friend could do," Number Ten went on, speaking over his shoulder to M. de Kervoisin, "would be to have me murdered, but he would find even that rather difficult. Ten thousand pounds of secret service money is considerably safer—and cheaper in the end."
Then at last Naniescu gave in. "Oh, have it your own way, curse you!" he exclaimed.
"The money now," Number Ten said coolly, raising a warning finger. "You may as well send one of your clerks over to the bank for it. I prefer that to taking your cheque."