come to a bad end—well, it was no more than he deserved, if only for his treachery to Raffles, and, at any rate, it would put a stop to our plunging from bad to worse in an adventure of which the sequel might well be worst of all. I do not say that I was wicked enough absolutely to desire the death of this sinner for our benefit; but I saw the benefit at least as plainly as the awful possibility, and it was not with unalloyed relief that I beheld a great figure stride through the lighted windows at our nearer approach.
Though his back was to the light before I saw his face, and the whole man might have been hacked out of ebony, it was every inch the living Levy who stood peering in our direction, one hand hollowed at an ear, the other shading both eyes.
'Is that you, boys?' he croaked in sepulchral salute.
'It depends which boys you mean,' replied Raffles, marching into the zone of light. 'There are so many of us about to-night!'
Levy's arms dropped at his sides, and I heard him mutter 'Raffles!' with a malediction. Next moment he was inquiring whether we had come down alone, yet peering past us into the velvet night for his answer.
'I brought our friend Bunny,' said Raffles, 'but that's all.'
'Then what do you mean by saying there are so many of you about?'
'I was thinking of the gentleman who was here just before us.'
'Here just before you? Why, I haven't seen a soul since my 'ousehold went to bed.'
'But we met the fellow just this minute within your gates: a little foreign devil with a head like a mop and the cloak of an operatic conspirator.'
'That beggar!' cried Levy, flying into a high state of excitement on the spot. 'That blessed little beggar on my tracks down here! I've 'ad him thrown out of the office in Jermyn Street; he's threatened me by letter and telegram; so now he thinks he'll come and try it on in person down 'ere. Seen me, eh? I wish I'd seen '
And a plated revolver twinkled and flashed in the electric light as Levy drew it from his hip pocket and flourished it in our faces; he would have gone prowling through the grounds with it if Raffles had not assured him that the foreign foe had fled on our arrival. As it was the pistol was not put back in his pocket when Levy at length conducted us indoors; he placed it on an occasional table beside the glass that he drained on entering; and forthwith set his back to a fire which seemed in keeping with the advanced hour, and doubly welcome in an apartment so vast that the billiard table was a mere item at one end, and sundry trophies of travel and the chase a far more striking and unforeseen feature.
'Why, that's a better grisly than the one at Lord's!' exclaimed Raffles, pausing to admire a glorious fellow near the door, while I mixed myself the drink he had declined.
'Yes,' said Levy, 'the man that shot all this lot used to go about saying he'd shoot
'I don't quite follow you, Mr. Levy.'
'Oh yes you do!' said the money-lender, with his gastric chuckle. 'How've you got on with that little bit o' burgling?'
And I saw him screw up his bright eyes, and glance through the open windows into the outer darkness, as though there was still a hope in his mind that we had not come down alone. I formed the impression that Levy had returned by a fairly late train himself, for he was in morning dress, in dusty boots, and there was an abundant supply of sandwiches on the table with the drinks. But he seemed to have confined his own attentions to the bottle, and I liked to think that the sandwiches had been cut for the two emissaries for whom he was welcome to look out for all night.
'How did you get on?' he repeated when he had given them up for the present.
'For a first attempt,' replied Raffles, without a twinkle, 'I don't think
I've done so badly.'
'Ah! I keep forgetting you're a young beginner,' said Levy, catching the old note in his turn.
'A beginner who's scarcely likely to go on, Mr. Levy, if all cribs are as easy to crack as that lawyers' office of yours in Gray's Inn Square.'
'As easy?'
Raffles recollected his pose.
'It was enormous fun,' said he. 'Of course one couldn't know that there would be no hitch. There was an exciting moment towards the end. I have to thank you for quite a new thrill of sorts. But, my dear Mr. Levy, it was as easy as ringing the bell and being shown in; it only took rather longer.'
'What about the caretaker?' asked the usurer, with a curiosity no longer to be concealed.
'He obliged me by taking his wife to the theatre.'
'At your expense?'
'No, Mr. Levy, the item will be debited to you in due course.'
'So you got in without any difficulty?'
'Over the roof.'
'And then?'
'I hit upon the right room.'
'And then, Raffles?'
'I opened the right safe.'
'Go on, man!'
But the man was only going on at his own rate, and the more Levy pressed him, the greater his apparent reluctance to go on at all.
'Well, I found the letter all right. Oh, yes, I made a copy of it. Was it a good copy? Almost too good, if you ask me.' Thus Raffles under increasing pressure.
'Well? Well? You left that one there, I suppose? What happened next?'
There was no longer any masking the moneylender's eagerness to extract the
'The next thing that happened,' said Raffles, in his most leisurely manner, 'was the descent of Bunny like a bolt from the blue.'
'Had he gone in with you?'
'No; he came in after me as bold as blazes to say that a couple of common, low detectives were waiting for me down below in the square!'
'That was very kind of 'im,' snarled Levy, pouring a murderous fire upon my person from his little black eyes.
'Kind!' cried Raffles. 'It saved the whole show.'
'It did, did it?'
'I had time to dodge the limbs of the law by getting out another way, and never letting them know that I had got out at all.'
'Then you left them there?'
'In their glory!' said Raffles, radiant in his own.
Though I must confess I could not see them at the time, there were excellent reasons for not stating there and then the delicious plight in which we had really left Levy's myrmidons. I myself would have driven home our