The Czar's Spy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 340 pages of information about The Czar's Spy.

The Czar's Spy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 340 pages of information about The Czar's Spy.

“Ah, you don’t remember, I suppose!” he smiled.  “Well, perhaps your memory will be refreshed by a month or two in prison.  You are also arrested.”

“But, your Excellency, I—­”

“Enough!” blared the bristly officer.  “You have given shelter to conspirators.  You know the penalty in Finland for that, surely?”

“But these gentlemen are surely not conspirators!” the poor old man protested.  “His Excellency is English, and the English do not plot.”

“We shall see afterwards,” he laughed.  And then, turning to the agent of police at his side, he gave him orders to search the log-hut carefully, an investigation in which one of the men from the outside joined.  They upset everything and pried everywhere.

“You may find papers or letters,” said the officer.  “Search thoroughly.”  And in every corner they rummaged, even to taking up a number of boards in the inner room which Elma had occupied.  But they found nothing.

A dozen times was the old wood-cutter questioned, but he stubbornly refused to admit that he had ever set eyes upon Elma, while I insisted on my right to return to Abo and see Boranski.  I knew, of course, by what we had overheard said by the prison-guards, that the Governor-General was extremely anxious to recapture the girl with whom, I frankly admit, I had now so utterly fallen in love.  And it appeared that no effort was being spared to search for us.  Indeed, the whole of the police in the provinces of Abo and of Helsingfors seemed to be actively making a house-to-house search.

But what could be the truth of Elma’s disappearance?  Had she fled of her own accord, or had she once more fallen a victim to some ingenious and dastardly plot.  That gray dress of hers might, I recollected, betray her if she dared to venture near any town, while her affliction would, of itself, be plain evidence of identification.  All I hoped was that she had gone and hidden herself in the forest somewhere in the vicinity to wait until the danger of recapture had passed.

For nearly half an hour I argued with the police officer whose intention it was to take me under arrest to Helsingfors.  Once there, however, I knew too well that my liberty would be probably gone for ever.  Whatever was the Baron’s motive in holding the poor girl a prisoner, it would also be his motive to silence me.  I knew too much for his liking.

“I refuse to go to Helsingfors,” I said defiantly.  “I am a British subject, and demand to be taken back to the port where my passport was vised.”  This argument I repeated time after time, until at length I succeeded in convincing him that I really had a right to be taken to Abo, and to seek the aid of the British Vice-Consul if necessary.

For as long as possible I succeeded in delaying our departure, but at length, just as the yellow sun began to struggle through the gray clouds, we were all three compelled to depart in sorrowful procession.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Czar's Spy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.