Weapons of Mystery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 210 pages of information about Weapons of Mystery.

Weapons of Mystery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 210 pages of information about Weapons of Mystery.

I shall not try and relate what happened the next two days, except to say that I set Simon to watch every train that came into Turin station, while I did all I could to discover whether he were hiding in Turin.

Neither of us saw Kaffar, nor did we hear anything of him.

Monday night came.  I had received no message from the lodging-house keeper, neither had I heard any news.  The suspense was becoming terrible.

Six o’clock!  Seven o’clock, and no news!

“Simon,” I said, “go to that lodging-house and ask whether any message has been received.”

The willing fellow, still with a smile on his face and a cheery look, started to do my bidding.  I do not know how I should have borne up during those two terrible days, but for my faithful friend.

He had not been gone above half a minute before he came bounding back to my room.

“A message jist ’a come, yer honour!” he cried.

Eagerly I snatched it, and read—­“Expect me home to-night by the midnight train.—­KAFFAR.

I caught up a time-table and anxiously scanned it.  The telegram was from Nice.  There was a train due from this fashionable seaport at 12.30.

The lodging-house keeper had kept his word, and Kaffar would be safe.  It was become intensely real, intensely exciting!

Five hours to wait—­five hours!  Only those who have felt as I did can know what they meant.

At twelve o’clock I sent Simon to the station, while I went to the lodging-house to await Kaffar’s arrival.

“Mr. Kaffar will have supper, I suppose?” I said to the proprietor of the house.

“Yes, I shall prepare supper.”

“Where?”

“In his own room.”

“Just so.  Could you manage to put me in a room where I can see him at supper without being observed?  I should like to enter quietly and give him a surprise.”

“You mean nothing wrong?”

“On my honour, I do not.”

“It is said,” mused the Italian, “that an English gentleman’s honour is like English cloth; it can always be depended on.  The adjoining room is empty, sir.”

“Thank you,” I replied, while he led the way to the room.

I had not been there long before I heard some one enter with the landlord.  The two rooms, like many we find in French hotels, could easily be made one, as a doorway led from one to the other.  I had arranged my door to be slightly ajar, so was able to see.

The man with the landlord was Kaffar!

I found that Kaffar could not speak Italian.  He spoke French enough to make himself understood, and, as his host was proficient in that language, French was the tongue in which they conversed.

“Has any one been asking for me?” asked Kaffar.

“Yes, sir.”

“Who?”

“A gentleman from England.”

“From England!  What kind of a man?”

“A giant, with brown hair.”

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Project Gutenberg
Weapons of Mystery from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.