Read The Launching of Roger Brook Online
Authors: Dennis Wheatley
The apology was so handsome that Roger could not but accept it, and it was not in his nature to bear malice. So,
with a bow, he handed the Chevalier back his sword, and said:
‘Pray, think no more of it, Monsieur le Chevalier. I admit now that I was much at fault myself. You had, I am sure, the best intentions in taking me to these places of entertainment and ‘twas kind of you to seek to provide amusement for a stranger. That I could raise no zest for little Mou-Mou was no fault of yours, and I should have made myself clear on that head much earlier. But I give you my word that I paid not once but twice for the dubious privilege of spending an hour in her company.’
‘And I willingly accept it, as I feel sure you will accept mine that I also paid the young harpy.’
‘Indeed, I do; so let us both thank God that we have no cause for more serious regrets on the matter than are occasioned by a few squandered guineas.’
De Roubec took Roger’s arm. ‘I swear to you,
mon ami
, that even in a drunken temper I would never have harmed you seriously. Indeed I vow I drew upon you only with the intent of scaring you into running away.’
He spoke with such earnestness that Roger found it difficult to doubt his sincerity and he flushed with pleasure as the Chevalier went on:
‘But what address you showed, and what courage! Having scratched a Chinaman I found a Tartar, and I was hard put to it to defend myself. Come now, my mouth is as dry as a bin of sawdust from that villainous champagne, and I am sobered up entirely. To show that there is no ill-feeling left between us let’s drink a bottle of good Burgundy together before we go to bed.’
Roger’s throat now also felt dry and parched so he readily assented, and they began to hammer with their sword hilts on the nail-studded door of the inn.
After a while it was opened by the wizened little serving-man who, having been aroused from his sleep in a cubbyhole under the stairs, grumblmgly admitted them.
De Roubec pulled out a fistful of
crowns
and showed them to the man, as he said, ‘Stir your stumps, knave, and get us up a bottle of Burgundy from the cellar. And a good one, mind; a Chambertin or a Hospice de Beaune, if you have it.’
Having lit the lantern in the parlour for them the man disappeared, to return a few minutes later with a dust-encrusted
bottle and glasses. After uncorking the wine and taking the money for it he shambled off back to his cubbyhole out in the hall.
The two recent antagonists now toasted one another with most friendly phrases and both felt considerably better after a good drink of the clean, generous Burgundy. The sight of the Chevalier’s pocket full of
crowns
had recalled to Roger that even if the later form of entertainment to which his companion had introduced him had proved a fiasco the earlier had been an unqualified success, and he remarked:
‘You must have made a pretty sum at Monsieur Tricot’s, since towards the end you were staking double
crowns
’
‘’Tis but indifferent sport playing at a low table,’ shrugged De Roubec grandly. ‘But ‘twas none too bad a haul, and ‘twill serve to keep me in wine for a day or two; with luck until my funds arrive. My sole regret is that you plan to leave Le Havre so soon, otherwise ’twould have been a pleasure to afford you some entertainment of your own choosing out of my winnings.’
‘I hope to complete my business tomorrow,’ said Roger, ‘but it may be a day or two before I can secure a passage home, and if so I will certainly avail myself of your kind invitation.’
De Roubec nodded. ‘Pray do not think that I have any desire to pry into your affairs, but I know Le Havre well, and if you feel that I might be of any assistance to you in this business of yours, do not hesitate to command me.’
Roger was now feeling in great fettle. The fact that he had actually fought in earnest for the first time and emerged victorious from the encounter filled him with elation; and, since the cause of the affray now appeared to have been no more than a stupid misunderstanding brought about by the fumes of dubious liquor, he was, not unnaturally, drawn towards his late antagonist. The Chevalier had, he felt, gone out of his way to take an interest in him as a young and lonely stranger, had seen to it that he got a good exchange for his English money and had enabled him to win a nice little sum. Moreover, it now seemed to him that the expedition to the ‘Widow Scarron’ should not be held against his new friend, since it might have appeared to many young men as the high-spot in an evening out. The Chevalier had,
too, take his defeat like a gentleman and was at the moment playing the generous host.
None of the excitements of the past twenty-four hours had caused Roger to forget for long that his sole purpose in coming to France was the satisfactory disposal of Georgina’s jewels, and this had yet to be accomplished. It struck him now that instead of seeking out a goldsmith for himself and dealing with one who might or might not give him a good price, he could both save himself time in the morning and make certain of securing a fair deal by consulting De Roubec, so he asked:
‘Do you perchance know of an honest goldsmith here in Le Havre?’
‘Why, yes,’ replied the Chevalier, after only a moment’s hesitation. ‘I know of several. Do you wish to make a purchase or have you something to sell?’
‘I wish to dispose of some trinkets, mainly gold items, but a few with gems set in them and a number of cameos. To do so was, in fact, my reason for coming to France.’
De Roubec’s eyes narrowed slightly, and Roger, seeing this, did not wonder, as the bare statement might have put all sorts of ideas into anyone’s head. With his usual quick inventiveness he went on to offer an entirely false explanation.
‘These jewels belonged to my mother’s twin sister, who died recently. The two were prodigiously devoted to one another and my father felt that should my mother perchance see any of them being worn by one of her neighbours the shock would affect her most severely. Yet he has need of the money they will bring; so, not wishing to dispose of them locally, he decided that the best course would be to send them abroad. As he was recalled to his ship unexpectedly and could not cross to France himself he charged me with this mission. Unfortunately I have little experience in such matters and if you could assist me in it I’d be mighty obliged to you.’
Having listened attentively to Roger’s somewhat mangled French, De Roubec nodded. ‘’Twill be a pleasure. I know the very man and will take you to him in the morning.’
Roger thanked him and they talked for a while on other topics, the Chevalier having apparently dismissed the matter of the jewels from his mind; but both of them were now
feeling tired so as soon as they had finished their wine they went upstairs to bed.
After looking under the loose board in the floor to make certain that his treasure was still there, Roger undressed to his shirt and slipping between the coarse cotton sheets was soon asleep.
He woke late in the morning, as he judged from the angle of the sun that it must be near nine o’clock, and after a hurried toilet transferred the jewels from their hiding-place to his pockets, then went downstairs.
The coffee room was deserted and to his surprise he found that rolls, butter and
confiture
were the only food provided for breakfast. Not being accustomed to such meagre fare he asked for something more substantial, and after a wait of ten minutes he was brought an
omelette fines herbes
; a dish entirely new to him but one which he thoroughly enjoyed.
On finishing his meal he went in search of De Roubec, and found that lanky gentleman lazily sunning himself on the front porch.
‘Ah, there you are!’ said the Chevalier, displaying his bad teeth in a friendly smile, ‘I trust you had a good night?’
‘Excellent, I thank you,’ Roger smiled back. ‘Except that I fear I slept over late, and I am naturally anxious to get my business settled as soon as possible. Would it be troubling you too much to take me this forenoon to the goldsmith you spoke of?’
‘Willingly; but I have been giving some little thought to the matter, and an idea upon it had occurred to me. I take it you are not so pressed for time as to be unable to afford me a few moments’ private converse in the parlour. There is no one about, so we shall have it to ourselves.’
‘By all means,’ Roger agreed. So they went into the parlour together and, having closed the door carefully behind him, De Roubec fastened the latch so that they should not be interrupted.
Wondering a little what these mysterious precautions portended, Roger sat down at one of the tables, but the Chevalier reassured him by saying: ‘There is no cause for alarm, yet one cannot be too careful when discussing transactions in which large sums of money are involved.’
Seating himself on the settee at Roger’s side he went on
in a low voice: ‘May I ask if you have mentioned this matter to anyone else?’
‘No,’ said Roger. ‘Not a soul in France knows of it other than yourself. I thought it unwise to noise it about that I was carrying upon me anything of such value.’
De Roubec nodded approvingly. ‘I am relieved to hear it, and ‘twas fortunate that in myself you chose an honest man to confide in. After all, you know little enough about me as it is, and great seaports such as this abound in rogues who would not scruple to cut your throat for a handful of
louis
.’
‘If one both drinks and fights with a man yet remains friends with him afterwards, one has fair reason to trust him,’ Roger laughed. ‘And I certainly trust you.’
The Chevalier bowed. ‘I am sensible of it, and should be prodigious distressed if it were not so. Have you the jewels perchance upon you now, or did you deposit them yesterday with a banker?’
‘No, at the moment I have them spread about in pockets all over my person, as together they make quite a bulky bundle.’
‘May I have sight of them?’
‘Certainly, if you wish.’
As Roger began to produce the trinkets and lay them out on the table the Chevalier added: ‘I ask only that I may get some idea as to their value, as it would be well if we fixed a price in our own minds before offering them to a goldsmith; and, although you are doubtless aware of their worth, I may be able to assist you in assessing what they are likely to fetch in France.’
One by one he picked up the items of the collection and examined them through his quizzing glass then, as Roger began to stow them back in his pockets again, he asked: ‘What price had you in mind?’
‘Five hundred guineas,’ said Roger, thinking it best not to show his ignorance by naming too small a sum.
De Roubec shook his head. They may be worth that in England, where everyone is very rich; but I doubt if you will get that for them in France. I am no expert in such trifles, but if they were mine I should be glad to accept three hundred and eighty
louis
for the lot. They are mostly old-fashioned pieces and of little value apart from their weight as gold.’
Roger was far from disappointed, as he had been quite
prepared to let them go for two hundred and fifty if he could get no better offer; and he congratulated himself again on having consulted the Chevalier, as, by having done so, he felt that he had as good as made himself an additional hundred and thirty pounds.
‘So be it,’ he said, endeavouring to appear a little crestfallen, ‘I’ll take three-eighty for them, since you advise it.’
‘Nay, we will ask four-fifty for them as our opening shot and only come down gradually. ’Tis all against a gentleman’s inclination to quibble over money, but one needs must for one’s own protection in a case like this; and by so doing we might screw the knave up to parting with four-hundred
louis
. But I have yet to tell you my disturbing thought.’
‘What is it?’ inquired Roger anxiously.
De Roubec hesitated a moment, then he said: ‘You will not take offence, I trust, at anything I may say?’
‘Nay, why should I do so if ’tis for my benefit?’
‘’Tis this, then. Your age is your own affair, but when I first set eyes on you last night I put you down as scarce seventeen. The fact that you handle your sword as well as a man makes no difference to the youthfulness of your appearance. Your account of how you came by these trinkets is fair enough, and ’twould not enter my head to cast doubt upon your word. Yet others, who have not had the happiness of your acquaintance, may not prove so credulous. For so young a man to be offering for sale all these women’s gewgaws would strike any goldsmith as strange, to say the least; and, God forbid that such a thing should occur, but he might even think that you had stolen them and are being hunted in England by the agents of the Minister of Police. ’Twill be obvious to him at a glance that the stuff is of English make and I gather that you know no one in Le Havre who could vouch for your honesty. Perhaps my forebodings are no more than moonshine, but I felt it my duty as your friend to warn you of what may befall. Since ’twould be monstrous unpleasant to find yourself clapped into prison on suspicion, for a month or more while inquiries were being made.’
Roger’s face fell in earnest now. It had never occurred to him that he might be faced with the same difficulties in disposing of Georgina’s jewels in France as he would have been in England. He had taken it for granted that a French goldsmith
would be prepared to buy without asking questions, but now it seemed that in offering them for sale here he would be running a far greater risk than he would have in some country town at home. There, the worst that could have befallen him would have been to pass a night in the lock-up and be ignominiously returned to his irate parent next day, whereas here he might be held a prisoner for weeks on end before tedious official inquiries led to his identity being fully established and his family in England securing his release.
‘I am much indebted to you,’ he said in a rather small voice, ‘I had not thought of that, and there is much in what you say.’
‘Of course, if you care to risk it,’ hazarded the Chevalier, ‘I will accompany you to a goldsmith’s with pleasure. But, willing as I am to help, I could not honestly say that I had independent knowledge as to how you came by these jewels, or swear to it that I had known you for more than a day; since if further inquiry were made I should soon be in a trouble myself for perjury.’